Renessa System

Novasys Medical has developed a non-surgical approach to treat stress urinary incontinence (SUI) due to bladder outlet hypermobility: the Renessa® System. The Renessa treatment uses a small probe which a physician passes through the urethra. The treatment can be performed in the convenience of a physician’s office or other outpatient setting. There are no incisions, bandages or dressings required. Recovery is rapid and comfortable, with minimal post-procedure limitations.
Benefits of the Renessa treatment include:
- Non-surgical, in-office procedure
- Single treatment
- No incisions, bandages, or dressings
- Excellent safety profile, well tolerated
- Can be performed using local anesthesia + oral sedation
- Rapid recovery with minimal limitations

Renessa System
The Renessa procedure uses radiofrequency energy (RF) to generate controlled heat at low temperatures in tissue targets within the lower urinary tract. The heat denatures collagen in the tissue at multiple small treatment sites. Upon healing, the treated tissue is firmer, increasing resistance to involuntary leakage at times of heightened intra-abdominal pressure, such as laughing, coughing or during exercise, thereby reducing or eliminating SUI episodes.
RF has been routinely used by physicians in the treatment of numerous conditions for many decades. At higher temperatures than those generated by the Renessa System, RF energy can cut and/or ablate tissue for the treatment of upper airway disorders, cardiac arrhythmias, benign prostate hyperplasia, excessive uterine bleeding (menorrhagia) and other conditions. Low temperature RF is used to treat luminal disorders such as gastroesophageal reflux disease, fecal incontinence, and now, female stress urinary incontinence.
Renessa Video
In this video, women describe their former problems with stress urinary incontinence and how they benefited from the Renessa treatment, a non-surgical therapeutic option for the millions of women who experience this common problem.
Also hear from a California urologist who treats patients with the Renessa system and who is also a Renessa patient herself.
Click the white triangle to play the video, which is 11 1/2 minutes long.
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