Urinary Incontinence Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Effect of Programmable Timer in Bladder Rehabilitation Treatment of Idiopathic Overactive Bladder in Children
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effect of bladder rehabilitation in a non-selected group of children with idiopathic overactive bladder and to clarify whether the effect of the treatment can be increased by addition of a programmable timer
Daytime urinary incontinence is common in children. At the age of 7 a prevalence of 2-9 %
has been reported. Daytime urinary incontinence is a heterogenic multifactorial illness
where the the symptoms has several degrees of severity and can be caused by different
mechanisms. Daytime urinary incontinence can be etiologically classified in the rare
neurogenic and structural forms and the common functional or idiopathic form (where no
neurological or structural cause of the bladder dysfunction can be identified.
The symptom based diagnosis OAB (overactive bladder) is most often used to describe daytime
urinary incontinence in children. OAB is defined as a symptom syndrome including urgency
with or without urge incontinence in combination with frequency.
When urinary tract infection and neurogenic and structural causes has been excluded the
nonpharmacological bladder rehabilitation is first line treatment in children with OAB. It
is expected that approximately 50 % of the children can be relieved of symptoms by this
treatment. The treatment consist of instruction in good micturition habits including toilet
position, sufficient fluid intake and voidings at predefined intervals. The treatment effect
is to a large degree dependent upon the ability of the children to void at fixed intervals.
Children at the age of 5-10 yrs generally find this difficult and a programmable timer seems
be an useful instrument in order to remind the child of voiding at fixed times. However
there has not been published studies of the effect of programmable timer.
Hypothesis:
- Daytime urinary incontinence in children aged 5-15 with idiophatic OAB can in 50 % of
cases be cured by bladder rehabilitation
- The compliance of the bladder rehabilitation treatment can for each individual be
increased by adding a programmable timer to the treatment.
Material and methods:
100 children with idiopathic OAB will be recruited from the Center of Child Incontinence,
Skejby University Hospital, Aarhus, Denmark.
After a run-in period of at least 4 weeks the children will be randomized to 12 weeks of
bladder rehabilitation with or without programmable timer.
The effect of the treatment will be estimated based on home recordings.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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