Overactive Bladder Syndrome Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Effect of Position (Sit/Stand up vs Supine Position) on Urge Sensation in Volunteers and in Patients With Overactive Bladder Syndrome
Importance of the problem OAB is a common health problem. Milsom et al. [1] randomly
selected a population from six European countries. From this population, 17% of the
respondents reported having OAB symptoms with 14% reporting frequency, 9% urgency, and 6%
urge incontinence. The study by Milsom et al. [1] showed that OAB adversely affected the
lives of the majority (65%) of the respondents who reported OAB symptoms. Chen et al. [2]
also reported that the prevalence of OAB in Taiwanese women was similar to that of Western
women. In the study of Chen et al.[2], the prevalence of OAB was 18.6% for the patients;
perceptions and the number of OAB condition significantly increased in the elderly women
(over 65 years old, 39.3%). Apart from impairing the physical health, OAB may have a
tremendous effect on psychological and social well-being. Information on the symptoms and
disease severity can yield important information that often complements objective measures.
Incontinence, increased urge and increased frequency of micturition affect nearly 100
million people in the western world (33 million in the US and 66 million in the European
Union). These conditions are not life threatening but they seriously affect quality of life
and ability to work. OAB is in some studies reported to have an incidence of up to 17 % in
the western population with great consequences for the quality of life.
Economic cost The total economic cost of this group of conditions is high. In 2002 the costs
in the US were approximately $12.7 billion[1] (estimated to be $17 billion and €22
billion/year in 2005). Approximately 25% of this expenditure is spent on treatment (drug
therapy, clinical consultation and surgery). Of those who suffer only 28% have sought help
and only half of those currently receive treatment. Less than 3% regain long lasting normal
control. Therefore, these costs are an under-estimate and the problem is large.
Aetiology
It is necessary to state whether correlations between objective findings and subjective
perception of symptoms exist, and whether the patient's 'everyday' symptoms are reproduced
during objective studies, when the results are reported. The principle aim of urodynamics is
to reproduce a patient's symptoms and to provide a patho physiological explanation for them.
The purposes of this study is to evaluate whether there is a relation between the position
(sitting/standing up vs supine position) and the bladder sensations in both healthy
volunteers and patients with OAB. Furthermore we would like to study patient perception of
bladder condition and bladder filling and volumes voided as well as the functional and
maximal bladder capacity in patients with OAB.
Because patients with pelvic floor dysfunction have widely varying expectations from
treatment, the patient's goal for treatment is highly subjective. Therefore, strategies for
assessing OAB should incorporate self-perceived disease condition.
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Observational Model: Cohort, Time Perspective: Prospective
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