View clinical trials related to Urinary Incontinence.
Filter by:This is an open label, interventional, single arm, multi-clinic study where each adult female participant with stress urinary incontinence (SUI) serves as her own control (vaginal pessary use vs. no vaginal pessary).
In our study, we aimed to evaluate the effects of core stabilization exercises added to traditional Kegel exercises on incontinence and quality of life in women with stress and stress dominant mixed urinary incontinence.
Urgency urinary incontinence (UUI) is common in older people and vastly reduces quality of life, yet the cause and mechanism of disease are not well understood. This study will investigate the role of adding behavioral sleep intervention to the standard pharmacotherapy in treatment of UUI among older adults, and the brain mechanisms involved in continence by evaluating brain changes. This will expand the current knowledge of how the sleep affects bladder control, and better characterize the brain mechanisms in maintaining continence.
Urge urinary incontinence (UUI) is associated with nocturia, a common cause of sleep disorders, also related to levels of anxiety and depression. Studies demonstrate improvement in the clinical parameters of women with UUI after treatment with transcutaneous tibial nerve stimulation (TTNS). However, there are few data available on the association of urinary symptoms in women with UUI with sedentary behavior (SB), physical activity level (PAL) and sleep quality (SQ). Our study has the objective of evaluating the impact of TTNS on urinary symptoms, anxiety level, life quality(LQ), sleep parameters, PAL and SB in women with UUI.
Urinary incontinence (UI) is a symptom that develops due to damage to the bladder, sphincter mechanism or pelvic floor muscles, defined as unconscious urinary incontinence, which is a common health problem among adult women. Urinary incontinence can be classified as urge incontinence (UUI), stress incontinence (SUI) or mixed incontinence (MUI). Considering the prevalence values of UI subtypes that change with age, it was found that SUI was the highest (32%) in the 40-59 age group. Although UI is not life-threatening, it imposes significant limitations on women's activities of daily living and sexual and interpersonal relationships. Emotional problems such as embarrassment, depression, sadness and low body image associated with UI have a negative impact on quality of life. Pharmacological, surgical and behavioral treatment methods can be applied in the treatment of UI, which causes significant negative effects on quality of life. However, there are various limitations in the implementation of these methods. This situation has revealed the necessity of developing new methods in the treatment of UI. One of the behavioral treatment methods that can provide therapeutic benefits for urinary incontinence is yoga. Recently, yoga has become a new option for strengthening pelvic floor muscles and treating symptoms related to pelvic floor dysfunctions. Yoga can be practiced by women without constant supervision by healthcare providers, thus providing an accessible and cost-effective self-management strategy for large numbers of women in the community. Nurses have important roles and responsibilities in the diagnosis, treatment and care process of UI. Nurses need to plan and implement a care that will increase the quality of life and provide comfort for patients with UI. The word comfort, which we often use in our daily life, expresses a basic human need. The taxonomic structure of the Comfort Theory, which was formed on the basis of the concept of comfort, which is a nursing function, attempt and at the same time, the intended result of most nursing interventions, consisting of three levels and four dimensions, was revealed by Kolcaba in 1988. Kolcaba emphasized that comfort care is a process as an attempt to achieve comfort, and that increasing comfort level is a product. In the literature, no randomized controlled study was found in which nursing interventions based on Comfort Theory were applied to female patients with a diagnosis of SUI. In this study, it is aimed to evaluate the effect of nursing interventions based on Comfort Theory applied to female patients with a diagnosis of SUI on UI, quality of life and comfort level.
The study is seeking to understand the needs of patients and healthcare practitioners for an innovation in the way that changes in bladder function are assessed. This information will be used in the design and evaluation of a device, being developed in parallel, that assesses changes to the volume and flow of urine in order to determine changes in bladder function. In order to ensure development is optimal, the principal research objective is therefore to understand the needs of patients and healthcare practitioners (ranging from care home staff and GPs in primary care, to urologists in tertiary referral centres).
To investigate the immediate, short-term and long-term efficacy of vaginal radiofrequency therapy in the treatment of stress urinary incontinence, and to compare the efficacy of pelvic floor electromyography combined with biofeedback therapy in stress urinary incontinence.
The aim of this study is to assess women's health care seeking behavior and knowledge of urinary incontinence and pelvic organ prolapse and to culturally adapt the Prolapse and Incontinence Knowledge Questionnaire (PIKQ) for the Hungarian population.
Neurogenic overactive bladder (NOAB) presents with urgency incontinence. Existing NOAB management is expensive, lacks standardized regimens, or is invasive. Therefore, evaluating the effectiveness of non-invasive repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) for NOAB management among stroke survivors remains crucial. Objectives: Evaluate the effects of active-rTMS compared to sham-rTMS among stroke survivors with NOAB, the interventions' cost-effectiveness and explore their experiences qualitatively.
This study aims to verify the results from our previous retrospective cohort analysis by establishing a database of well-characterised patients prospectively. The different prevalence of neurological disorders, abdominal, urological and obstetrical surgery, diarrhoea and other potential associated factors as well as the importance of abnormalities identified by 3D high resolution anorectal manometry (HARM) will be compared between subjects with feacal incontinence (FI), double incontinence (DI) and controls. Presence and severity of both FI and urinary incontinence (UI) will be evaluated by disease specific questionnaires. Measuring both disease severity and Quality of Life (QoL) is needed to determine the true impact of incontinence. Finally, the impact on quality of life will be compared between both groups.