View clinical trials related to Urinary Incontinence, Stress.
Filter by:To report a case of impairment urethral coitus after the midurethral sling procedure
Transperineal ultrasonography is gaining importance in preoperative and postoperative evaluation of the patient with urinary incontinence with allowing well detailed information about the anterior compartment. There is little evidence that transperineal sonography can aid surgeons to predict the success or failure after mid-urethral slings. We aimed to investigate the efficacy of sonography in mini-sling operations to predict the success or failure.
Measure effect of postural correction in abdominopelvic exercises on the improvement of the quality of life in patients with SUI. 42 women aged between 46-75 with SUI and stress-predominant mixed urinary incontinence. There were randomly assigned two groups of different treatment. Quality of life was measured by questionnaires: Incontinence Questionnaire Short Form (ICIQ-IU-SF) and King's Health Questionnaire (KHQ) global punctuation and incontinence impact. Treatment satisfaction was measured by VAS scale.
The aim of the present study is to test the hypothesis that voluntary pelvic floor muscle pre-contraction (the Knack) (alone) can be a treatment for urine leakage during efforts. For this purpose, the following parameters will be analysed and compared amongst 1) the Knack, 2) pelvic floor muscle training and 3) the Knack + pelvic floor muscle training groups: urine leakage as assessed by the pad test, urinary symptoms, muscle function, quality of life, subjective cure, adherence to exercises in the outpatient setting and at home and perceived self-efficacy of pelvic floor muscle exercises. The study population will comprise women with mild to moderate stress urinary incontinence or mixed urinary incontinente (with predominant stress urinary incontinence) as assessed by means of the one-hour pad test (leakage ≥2 g). Leakage up to 10 grams will be rated mild stress urinary incontinence and of 11 to 50 grams as moderate stress urinary incontinence. The sample will also include women with grade 2 muscle strength (normal contraction with elevation of the anterior vaginal wall) on the two-finger assessment rated according to the Oxford scale. The primary outcome measure will be the objective cure of urinary incontinence as assessed by means of the one-hour pad test three months after randomization. Secondary outcome measures: three-day bladder diary, 1 hour pad test, International Consultation on Incontinence Questionnaire - Short Form, Incontinence Quality of Life Questionnaire, Subjective cure of stress urinary incontinence, Self-efficacy/outcome expectation to pelvic floor muscle exercises, Frequency of the outpatient sessions, adherence to home exercises and pelvic floor muscle function, morphometry, strength and vaginal squeeze pressure.
The ARTUS MONO implant is an active implantable medical device (AIMD) that assist the urethral sphincter function of female patients suffering from moderate to severe urinary incontinence, by remotely opening and closing a cuff placed around the bladder neck. The purpose of this clinical investigation is to evaluate the feasibility of implantation of the device, its safety and its efficacy, when temporarily implanted in female patients scheduled for anterior pelvic exenteration for bladder cancer.
To verify the effect of an adapted electrostimulation (EE) protocol for stress and mixed urinary incontinence (SUI / M) and its impact on quality of life (QoL)
The investigators will conduct a randomized controlled trial to evaluate the efficacy of a group-based yoga intervention to decrease the frequency and impact of urinary incontinence in ambulatory middle-aged and older women and explore potential mediators of improvement in outcomes. Women aged 45 years and older who report daily or more frequent stress-, urgency-, or mixed-type incontinence, are not already engaged in formal yoga or muscle stretching/strengthening programs, are willing to temporarily forgo other clinical treatments for incontinence, are able to walk to and use the bathroom without assistance, and meet other eligibility criteria will be recruited from multiple locations surrounding the San Francisco Bay area.
A randomized controlled trial for patients with stress urinary incontinence or stress-dominant mixed incontinence. Subjects will be randomized to 8-weeks of home kegel exercises or 8 weeks of pelvic floor muscle exercises using the leva digital pelvic health system that includes visual biofeedback via smartphone.
In this pilot study the investigators attempt to answer the question, does mindfulness exercises before urodynamic testing reduce patient's perception of anxiety or pain?
This is a prospective, randomized, double-blind, sham-controlled clinical study. The study is designed to demonstrate that active is superior to sham for the efficacy endpoints and is deemed to have appropriate safety as compared to sham.