View clinical trials related to Cystitis Recurrent.
Filter by:The goal of this clinical trial is to learn about the effect on the bacterial composition in the microbiome (the body's own bacteria) of urine, vagina and faeces after treatment with lactobacilli (lactobacilli's are a part of the microbiome), and its influence on repeated cystitis in postmenopausal women. The main questions it aims to answer are: - Does treatment with lactobacilli change the composition of the urine microbiome in postmenopausal women? - Does treatment with lactobacilli prevent repeated cystitis in postmenopausal women? Participants will be followed for 6 months. They will for 3 months receive a look-alike substance that contains no active drug and for the other 3 months tablets with lactobacilli. A computer program will decide what treatment the participant will begin with, and after 3 months she will be receiving the tablets, she did not get first. This way all participants receive both type of tablets and can be their own control. What type of tablet the participants is taking is unknown to both clinical staff and participants. The participants will come to the hospital for start-up, and every 1,5 moths for the next 6 months. They deliver - faeces sample - urine tests - vaginal swab each time they are seen. When entering the study, they also complete health care questions on medication, earlier surgery, alcohol, tobacco, childbirths, weight, height etc. They make a drinking and voiding diary 3 times over the 6 months. When the study is over, alle the samples of faeces, urine and the vaginal swab will undergo analyzation for the bacterial composition in the microbiome, and differences in the microbiome when taking lactobacilli or not will be examined. The urine sample is controlled for bacteria known to give cystitis, and the influence on repeated cystitis will also be examined.
Among postmenopausal women who suffer from recurrent urinary tract infections (UTI), vaginal estrogen therapy prevents UTI recurrences for 50% of sufferers. This research will investigate why some women benefit but others do not, focusing on (a) the effects of vaginal estrogen therapy on the bacteria that inhabit the vagina and bladder, (b) its influence on immune responses in both compartments, and (c) the extent to which those changes are critical to successful UTI prevention. The findings will be a first step in the development of more effective strategies to prevent UTI, one of the most common and costly benign urologic conditions.
Half of the women have a once-in-a-lifetime episode of cystitis. Recurrence occurs in about 20% to 30% of patients, and half of these patients will have more than 4 episodes per year, defining recurrent cystitis. The clinical assessment sometimes brings to light favourable factors; variables in pre- or post-menopause; but in the majority of cases, no explanatory cause can solve the problem and some authors refer to resignation as a classic reaction to this problem. several countries have already opted for alternative treatments (Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, phytotherapy, diuresis treatment), especially since the pressure of antibiotic selection is at the root of the dramatic spread of bacterial resistances. There is a growing interest in the potential of complementary medicine to assist in this care. Products based on cranberries, for example, have been particularly studied and a 2012 Cochrane review concluded that there is a benefit with an estimated risk reduction of between 10 and 20%. Another "alternative" approach is the use of Chinese medicinal herbs. These herbs have been used for more than 2000 years. The implementation of phyto-aromatherapy treatment implies a global management of patients with recurrent cystitis. Initially, it involves a curative phase as soon as the first symptoms of the attack appear, thanks to a mixture of antibacterial essential oils. In a second phase, it integrates a preventive phase over several months thanks to an association of medicinal plants whose effects in this field have been proven in vitro and in vivo, allowing to rebalance a "terrain" associating anxiety, hypersensitivity to pain, a terrain willingly associated with the irritable bowel syndrome in these patients. While having few side effects, the plants will act, in the long term, at different levels: directly on the cause of the disease thanks to their antiseptic, antiadhesive and diuretic activities, but also by reducing the symptoms thanks to their anti-inflammatory, analgesic, antispasmodic and anxiolytic activities. Investigators hypothesize that patients with recurrent cystitis can be improved by a two-phase, multi-plant, phyto-aromatherapy treatment combining several plants: the treatment of attacks, by aromatherapy, and a prophylactic treatment, by phytotherapy. In the absence of any such studies published in the literature, investigators propose a non-randomised prospective monocentric interventional pilot study on 15 patients with proof of concept and feasibility.