View clinical trials related to Urinary Incontinence.
Filter by:To evaluate the effect of controlling lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) with anticholinergics on improving the ability to awaken (AA) in children with nonmonosymptomatic enuresis and evaluate the potential implication of improved AA for treatment response prediction.
Sacral neuromodulation (SNM) which is approved as a treatment for men and women with urgency urinary incontinence (UUI), urgency frequency syndrome, urinary retention and anal incontinence, is a procedure designed to deliver electrical pulses to the sacral nerves, thereby influencing the bladder, sphincters, and pelvic floor. Although the success rates of this treatment are quite high, the precise mechanism of action of SNM in subjects with UUI remains unclear. Moreover, there are little data regarding specific patient characteristics that may serve as "predictors" for SNM success. Recent studies suggest that the bacterial community that lives in the urinary tract plays a role in the development and continuation of urinary symptoms. It is proposed that the urinary microbiome may change in women before and after SNM implantation and this study aims to describe these changes. Investigators in this study also hope to determine if differences in the urinary microbiome exist in women with a positive response to SNM treatment (responders) compared to those without symptom improvement (non-responders). This hypothesis will be tested by collecting urine samples as well as questionnaire and medical data from subjects with UUI that are already planning on undergoing SNM as part of clinical care before and after their SNM treatment.
This pilot protocol is aimed to evaluate the effectiveness and safety of electroacupuncture therapy for the post-stroke patients with urinary incontinence.
This study compares mixed urinary incontinence symptoms before and after a combined treatment with Botox and Bulkamid. Eligible for the study are adult females with a mixed urinary incontinence, having both urgency urinary symptoms and stress urinary symptoms.
Previous studies show that incontinence is relatively common during pregnancy and after delivery. Experiencing incontinence during pregnancy or in the first year after delivery increases the risk of long term incontinence. There is scarce documentation of the long term prevalence of anal incontinence (AI) in Norway. This study aims to explore prevalence and risk factors for incontinence approximately six years after delivery among the 1718 who participated in two previous studies exploring the prevalence and predictors of anal incontinence in late pregnancy and during the first year after first delivery, and the effect of pelvic floor muscle exercises as treatment for anal incontinence after delivery. Increased awareness and knowledge about risk factors and long term prevalence of anal incontinence among health professionals as well as pregnant and parous women may give indications about which women to target for preventative measures to reduce the risk of new onset of postpartum AI during pregnancy and after delivery. Further, increased knowledge may aid in planning individualized follow-up during pregnancy and the first year as well as in the long term among women with existing AI symptoms.
Transurethral injection using polyacrylamide hydrogel (Bulkamid®, Contura A/S, Denmark) is an established treatment for stress urinary incontinence. The rates of women reporting improvement or cure after Bulkamid injection for stress urinary incontinence range between 64-77% with a very low morbidity. However, the indications for use are unclear. Although transurethral polyacrylamide hydrogel injection is inferior to midurethral slings with regard to expected cure rates, the procedure is associated with very low rates of adverse events in general and serious adverse event in particular. As such, it may be an important alternative for patients where surgery is not considered a safe option either because of co-morbidity or because of complicated incontinence. The investigators performed a prospective study to determine the effects of transurethral polyacrylamide hydrogel injection in patients considered ineligible for midurethral sling surgery.
This prospective interventional randomized controlled trial will recruit women with MUI scheduled for surgical treatment where patients will be randomized to either Burch colposuspension, TOT or TVT. Regular postoperative follow up will be planned for at least 2 years. The primary outcome measures will be the objective and subjective cure rates.
This pilot study will assess the feasibility and acceptability of an educational workshop on pelvic floor disorders and its potential impact on decisional conflict.
This is a multicenter, prospective, randomized comparative study in which patients are randomized to one of four different bladder volumes and a Cough Stress Test (CST) is performed in both the standing and sitting positions. The goal is to assess the agreement of each CST method with both urodynamics diagnosis of Stress Urinary Incontinence (SUI) and the 24-hour pad test. The primary outcome is to determine what CST method best correlated with either test in the diagnosis of SUI.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether an intervention (pre-procedure telephone call by the investigators) will reduce anxiety in women undergoing urodynamic testing (UDT) compared to usual care. Our hypothesis is that women who receive the intervention will report less anxiety immediately before UDT than women who receive usual care.