Urinary Incontinence Clinical Trial
Official title:
Sacral Transcutaneous Nerve Stimulation Treatment for Functional Daytime Incontinence in Children With Over Active Bladder Syndrome
The purpose of this study is to perform a randomized controlled investigation of the effect of surface nerve stimulation on functional daytime incontinence in children with OAB.
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 of OAB. It is expected
that approximately 50 % of the children can be relieved of symptoms by this treatment. In
the non-responding cases behavioural modifying regimes can be coupled with anticholinergic
medication. However, poor compliance of the child or parents, or dose limiting side effects
often influences the efficacy of this intervention. Also a considerable number of children
experience no or only limited effect from the treatment even though all instructions are
complied with. This has let to research into new treatment modalities and the use of low
frequency electrical current to inhibit detrusor overactivity in adults has become common.
Pilot studies have indicated a significant effect of TENS on urinary incontinence in
children with OAB.
Hypothesis:
- Sacral TENS is an effective treatment of urinary incontinence in children with OAB
refractory to anticholinergic medication coupled with bladder training and voiding
reeducation.
- The acute effect of sacral TENS can be identified by urodynamics
- It is possible to predict the outcome of sacral TENS treatment in these children.
30 children (age 5-14 years) with functional daytime incontinence refractory to
anticholinergic medication coupled with bladder training. The study protocol consists
of 1 week of basic home registrations and a 4 day in-patient phase succeeded by a 4
week home training period. The participants will be randomized to treatment with either
active or inactive TENS.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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