Fecal Incontinence Treatment Phoenix, AZ — Sacral Neuromodulation | Bladder Centers of America
★  5.0 · 127 Google Reviews · Center of Excellence

Take Back Your
Confidence.

Phoenix's center for sacral neuromodulation — specialty treatment for fecal incontinence, urge soiling, bowel urgency, and accidental bowel leakage. The only implanted therapy with long-term efficacy data, FDA-approved for bowel control since 2011.

FDA-Approved Since 2011 Medicare Accepted No Referral Required Free Consultation
Mature woman with bowel control confidence — Bladder Centers of America Phoenix
2011
FDA-approved for
bowel control
2011
FDA-approved for fecal
incontinence — since 2011
+2.27
Greater Wexner-score improvement
vs. PTNS (meta-analysis)
0
Serious adverse events in
head-to-head SNS vs PTNS trials
10–20
Years of rechargeable
battery life per device
Types of Bowel Issues We Treat

Bowel control problems are common
but rarely discussed.

The right treatment depends on which pattern of symptoms you experience. We evaluate each case carefully and without judgment.

Urge Fecal Incontinence

Sudden, intense urge to defecate followed by leakage before reaching the bathroom.

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Passive Soiling

Leakage of stool or mucus without warning — often discovered on undergarments without sensing it.

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Bowel Urgency

A sudden, hard-to-control need to defecate — restricting work, travel, and social life.

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Bowel Frequency

Multiple bowel movements per day or chronic loose stools that interfere with daily activities.

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Mixed Fecal Incontinence

A combination of urge and passive leakage. Treatment is matched to the dominant pattern.

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Functional Constipation

Difficulty fully emptying the bowel or chronic slow-transit constipation, when conservative care has failed.

You May Be a Candidate If…

SNM for bowel control when
other treatments haven't worked.

Sacral neuromodulation for bowel control is most often considered when conservative therapies haven't provided enough relief. Many of our patients arrive with at least one of the following.

  • You leak stool unexpectedly or with sudden urgency.
  • You have at least one fecal-incontinence episode per week.
  • You have tried fiber, dietary changes, and antidiarrheal medications.
  • You have completed pelvic-floor biofeedback without lasting relief.
  • You wear pads or protective garments to manage leakage.
  • You avoid travel, social events, or foods because of bowel control.
  • You have a history of obstetric injury or sphincter damage.
  • You also experience overactive-bladder symptoms (a common pairing).
  • You want to test the therapy before committing to a permanent implant.
Schedule a Free Candidacy Review →
✦ FDA-Approved Since 2011

The only implanted therapy with long-term efficacy data for fecal incontinence.

A 2018 meta-analysis of 302 patients showed SNM improved bowel control scores by 2.27 points more than PTNS — with zero serious adverse events in the head-to-head trials.

+2.27
greater Wexner-score improvement with SNM vs PTNS — 2018 meta-analysis, 302 patients.
0
serious adverse events reported in head-to-head SNM vs PTNS trials.

Source: Thaha MA et al. Int J Colorectal Dis. 2018

Schedule a Free Consult →
How It Works

A bowel pacemaker that
retrains nerve coordination

The same S3 sacral nerve that regulates the bladder also coordinates anal sphincter tone, rectal sensation, and pelvic-floor function. SNM is the only implanted therapy with long-term efficacy data for fecal incontinence. We use the Axonics System (Boston Scientific) and Medtronic InterStim — both FDA-approved.

1

External Trial

A 1–2 week test phase using a temporary lead and external stimulator. You track whether incontinence episodes, urgency, and bowel-control confidence improve. Fully reversible — no permanent commitment.

2

Permanent Implant

If your trial is successful, a small rechargeable device is implanted in a same-day outpatient procedure under local anesthesia with sedation. Many patients resume light activity the same day.

3

Programming & Follow-up

Settings are fine-tuned in the office to match your symptoms. Adjustments are made over time. The device is rated for up to 20 years of rechargeable battery life.

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Trial first. Always.

Every patient completes the external trial before any permanent device is placed. If you don't see meaningful improvement, the lead is removed in the office. You are never locked in to proceeding with a permanent implant.

Real Evidence, Real Results

The most-studied implanted therapy
for fecal incontinence

+2.27
Greater Wexner-score improvement with SNM vs PTNS (meta-analysis, 302 patients)
2011
FDA-approved for fecal incontinence — the only implanted therapy with long-term efficacy data
0
Serious adverse events reported in head-to-head SNM vs PTNS clinical trials

Source: Thaha MA et al. Int J Colorectal Dis. 2018 — meta-analysis, 302 patients, SNM vs PTNS for fecal incontinence.

Evidence-Based Comparison

How SNM compares to other
bowel control treatments

Bowel control treatments range from dietary changes to surgery. Here is how each option compares for adults with refractory fecal incontinence.

TreatmentBest ForWhat the Evidence Shows
Dietary & Fiber ChangesMild symptoms, first-lineHelpful starting point but rarely resolves moderate-to-severe fecal incontinence on its own.
Antidiarrheal MedicationsLoose-stool-related incontinenceReduces stool frequency but doesn't address sphincter or nerve dysfunction. Limited long-term benefit for urge FI.
Pelvic Floor BiofeedbackMild–moderate FI with intact sphincterHelpful adjunct. Requires ongoing sessions; benefit wanes without maintenance. Does not address neurogenic FI.
PTNSOffice-based, no implantSome evidence for FI. Meta-analysis shows SNM improves Wexner scores 2.27 points more than PTNS with fewer episodes per week.
SphincteroplastyAcute sphincter tearsEffective for fresh obstetric tears; results deteriorate significantly at 5–10 years. Not suitable for neurogenic FI.
Sacral Neuromodulation ✦Urge FI, passive soiling, bowel urgency, mixed FIOnly implanted therapy with long-term FI efficacy data. FDA-approved since 2011. Outperforms PTNS in meta-analysis. Works even with mild-to-moderate sphincter damage. Same device treats bladder and bowel.

Sources: Thaha et al., Int J Colorectal Dis 2018 — meta-analysis of SNS vs PTNS for fecal incontinence (302 patients).

Your Specialist

Treated by the
#1 Axonics provider in the world

Dr. Tory L. McJunkin, MD
✦ #1 Axonics Provider Worldwide

Dr. Tory L. McJunkin, MD

Triple Board-Certified · Former Mayo Clinic Faculty · SNM Specialist

Dr. McJunkin is a triple board-certified neuromodulation specialist, former Mayo Clinic faculty member, and author/editor of the definitive sacral neuromodulation textbook. He personally implants Axonics and Medtronic InterStim systems daily for both bladder and bowel control — and performs every trial and every permanent implant himself.

Meet Dr. McJunkin →
Your First Appointment

No judgment. No pressure.
Just an honest conversation.

We understand how difficult it is to talk about bowel control. The first visit is private, unhurried, and focused entirely on you.

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Your story

We start by listening — symptom history, what you've already tried, and how bowel leakage affects your daily life. No judgment, ever.

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Honest candidacy review

Not everyone is a candidate for sacral neuromodulation. Dr. McJunkin tells you directly which therapies match your situation, including non-implant options.

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Clear next steps

You leave with a written plan, timing, and insurance details. Our team handles prior authorization. Your first appointment can be telehealth — from the privacy of your home.

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Telehealth available for the initial consultation.

You don't have to come in to start the conversation. We send the video link 24 hours before your appointment. Medicare and most major plans accepted. No referral required.

Coverage & Getting Started

Medicare and most major plans
cover SNM for bowel control.

No referral required. SNM for fecal incontinence is FDA-approved and covered by Medicare and most major commercial insurance plans when medical-necessity criteria are met. Our team handles prior authorizations on your behalf and verifies your benefits before any procedure.

Frequently Asked Questions

Your bowel control
questions, answered honestly.

Urge fecal incontinence is driven by abnormal nerve signaling between the rectum and the anal sphincter. SNM modulates the S3 nerve circuit that controls sphincter tone and rectal sensation. A 2018 meta-analysis of 302 patients showed SNM improved Wexner scores by 2.27 points more than PTNS, with significantly fewer fecal incontinence episodes per week.
Passive soiling is usually caused by reduced anal sphincter resting tone or impaired rectal sensation. SNM helps restore both, reducing leakage that occurs without conscious awareness. SNM has been FDA-approved for fecal incontinence since 2011.
The same device, lead placement, and S3 nerve target work for both bladder and bowel control. Many patients have overlapping symptoms — urge incontinence plus fecal incontinence — and a single SNM implant can address both simultaneously.
Yes — obstetric sphincter injury is one of the most common reasons patients consider SNM. The therapy has been shown to help even when imaging shows mild-to-moderate sphincter damage, by improving the nerve coordination of remaining sphincter function.
SNM has shown benefit in select patients with refractory slow-transit constipation, though FDA approval is specifically for fecal incontinence. We typically work through pelvic-floor biofeedback and medical therapies first; SNM is considered when conservative care has failed.
A 1–2 week external trial uses a temporary lead and external stimulator. You go about your normal life while tracking incontinence episodes. Only patients who experience meaningful improvement proceed to a permanent implant. The trial is fully reversible — the temporary lead is removed in the office at the end of the trial period.
Yes. SNM for fecal incontinence is FDA-approved and covered by Medicare and most major commercial insurance plans when medical-necessity criteria are met. Our team handles prior authorization at no cost to you.
No referral is required. You can schedule directly by calling 480-757-8777 or using our contact form. Your first appointment can be telehealth. Some HMO plans require a PCP referral for coverage — call your plan's member services if you're on an HMO.
Take the Next Step

You don't have to
manage this alone.

Most patients start with a short consultation and, when appropriate, a temporary trial before making any permanent decision. Your first appointment can be telehealth — from the privacy of your home.

Schedule a Free ConsultationNo referral required · Medicare accepted · Telehealth available
FDA-Approved Since 2011 No Referral Required Medicare Accepted Telehealth Available #1 Axonics Physician Worldwide
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