View clinical trials related to Enuresis.
Filter by:This study is designed to evaluate whether bilateral Posterior Tibial Nerve Stimulation is more effective than unilateral Posterior Tibial Nerve Stimulation at treating overactive bladder and urge urinary incontinence
The purpose of this study is to evaluate whether the bedwetting alarm trigger activated by parents to wake their child, in addition to the moisture alarm, will improve treatment success compared to the moisture alarm alone.
This is a multi-site, randomized, prospective study designed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of the Votiva device headpieces through radiofrequency for vaginal rejuvenation. An anticipated 50 subjects will undergo 3 treatments of the vulvovaginal area using radiofrequency unit or radiofrequency placebo. Study duration for each subject is approximately six months (including screening, 3 treatment sessions 3-4 weeks apart and 2 follow-up visit at 3 and 6 months post initiation of treatment (4 and 12 weeks after completion of last treatment). Efficacy will be measured and evaluated by validated questionnaires to include: The Vulvovaginal Symptoms Questionnaire, Vaginal Laxity Questionnaire (VLQ), Urogenital Distress Short Form (UDI-6) and Incontinence Impact Questionnaire Short Form (IIQ-7), Female Sexual Function Index (FSFI) and the Female Sexual Distress Scale-Revised (FSDS-R).
Full ambulatory polysomnography at home performed two nights in 30 healthy children and one night in 30 children with mono-symptomatic nocturnal enuresis (15 with polyuria and 15 without polyuria). The children will be aged 7-14 years of age. The sleep will be evaluated on sleep quality, number of periodic limb movements per hour, blood pressure and pulse, beat to beat variation by electrocardiography during sleep, respiration during sleep, nocturnal urine production, and enuresis episodes.
Uroflowmetry(UF) has been the standard first-line diagnostic tool for the evaluation of pediatric voiding dysfunction. But recently, UF combined with pelvic flow electromyography(EMG) is emphasized and recommended to analyze the separate contributions of the detrusor and bladder outlet and sole UF is discouraged except for the follow-up study after abnormal UF/EMG result(Bauer et al., 2015). However, electrode itself can disturb pelvic floor relaxation and there is no evidence about necessity of consecutive UF/EMG test. Therefore, the investigators are going to compare three different methods (Primary-Secondary: UF/EMG-UF/EMG, UF/EMG-sole UF, sole UF-UF/EMG)
Few surgical methods to treat male stress urinary incontinence have been assessed in comparative, randomised interventional studies. Ustrap is a new adjustable-pressure 4-arm device. The artificial sphincter is currently considered the gold standard device in this field. The aim of this randomised prospective international study is to assess the efficacy and safety of the Ustrap® device comparatively with an artificial sphincter (AMS800) in the treatment of stress urinary incontinence following prostate removal in cancer patients.
The purpose of this study is compare the effect of laser and of kinesiotherapy in the treatment of women with stress urinary incontinence
A trial to answer the debatabal question about the role of urodynamic study in surgical treatment for stress urinary incontinence.
Urinary incontinence affects more than 200 million people worldwide. In women, childbirth or menopausal aging atrophic vagina, lack of estrogen stimulation of muscular turgor of the vagina, decrease tone of the urogenital diaphragm, attenuation and weakening of the urethral sphincter all result in stress incontinence, urge incontinence and sometimes mixed incontinence respectively. The purpose of this study is to evaluate reconstructive lipoplasty with micro-fragmented autologous adipose tissue (Lipogems®) in female patients with stress urinary incontinence. This is a prospective study of 25 subjects that will be evaluated over a period of one year. The treatment consist of the injection of micro fragmented adipose tissue, previously extracted from the patient in the area of the urethral sphyncter. Patients will have follow ups at 6 months with Urodynamic studies to measure the pre-post injection differences to-date. Visual analog score questionnaire and report in subjective improvement, pad use and stress cough test will be documented at 1, 3, 6, and 12 months follow-up.
This study will evaluate the clinical efficacy of a Transcutaneous Fractional Radiofrequency Device (TFRF) for the treatment of vaginal laxity (VL) and urogynecological symptoms.