S
Stefan De Wachter
Researcher at University of Antwerp
Publications - 175
Citations - 3682
Stefan De Wachter is an academic researcher from University of Antwerp. The author has contributed to research in topics: Overactive bladder & Urinary incontinence. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 155 publications receiving 2870 citations. Previous affiliations of Stefan De Wachter include Maastricht University & Maastricht University Medical Centre.
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The International Continence Society (ICS) report on the terminology for adult male lower urinary tract and pelvic floor symptoms and dysfunction.
Carlos Arturo Levi D'Ancona,Bernard T. Haylen,Matthias Oelke,Luis Abranches-Monteiro,Edwin P. Arnold,Howard B. Goldman,Rizwan Hamid,Yukio Homma,Tom Marcelissen,Kevin Rademakers,Alexis Schizas,Ajay K. Singla,Irela Soto,Vincent Tse,Stefan De Wachter,Sender Herschorn,Dysfunction +16 more
TL;DR: Due to its increasing complexity, the terminology for male lower urinary tract and pelvic floor symptoms and dysfunction needs to be updated using a male‐specific approach and via a clinically‐based consensus report.
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Sacral Neuromodulation: Standardized Electrode Placement Technique
Klaus E. Matzel,Emmanuel Chartier-Kastler,Charles H. Knowles,Paul A. Lehur,Arantxa Muñoz-Duyos,Carlo Ratto,Mona Rydningen,Michael Sørensen,Philip Van Kerrebroeck,Stefan De Wachter +9 more
TL;DR: Based on these assumptions, the technique of sacral spinal neuromodulation has been redefined and the only currently available system licensed for all pelvic indications (Medtronic Interstim®) is referred to.
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Frequency-volume charts: a tool to evaluate bladder sensation.
TL;DR: Whether frequency‐volume charts can be used as a non‐invasive tool to study bladder sensation during normal daily life is evaluated and the agreement between sensory data obtained from frequency‐ volume charts and conventional cystometric bladder filling is studied.
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On the origins of the sensory output from the bladder: the concept of afferent noise
TL;DR: The emerging picture is complex, but this complexity must not be negated or oversimplified and must be embraced and incorporated into thinking when designing experiments, analysing data, diagnosing patients and evaluating treatment.
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Intravesical oxybutynin: a local anesthetic effect on bladder C afferents.
TL;DR: It is shown that intravesical oxybutynin has a direct anesthetic effect within the bladder wall, which could explain its clinical benefits in decreasing symptoms of bladder overactivity.