View clinical trials related to Overactive Bladder.
Filter by:This is a multicenter study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of 2 different doses of DR-3001. For eligible subjects the duration of the study will be approximately 20 weeks; this will consist of a 4-week screening period, a 12-week treatment period and a 4-week follow-up period. Subjects will have physical and laboratory exams, including blood draws at each scheduled visit. Subjects will be required to insert a vaginal ring (replacing it every 4 weeks) and to keep a daily record of their toilet voids (including time,type and volume) for 3 days at several specified time points.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether women with overactive bladder (OAB) who receive direct instillation via a catheter of a Botulinum-A Toxin (Botox) with Dimethyl Sulfoxide (DMSO) solution experience significantly better improvement of their OAB symptoms when compared to a similar group of women with OAB who receive instillation of DMSO only.
To assess the long term safety, tolerability and efficacy of fesoterodine in patients with OAB.
Despite the great number of reports about the efficacy of oestrogens or antimuscarinics on OAB symptoms, so far no author has tried to investigate whether the concomitant administration of these two drugs, acting on two different pathophysiological mechanisms, could have a synergic effect reducing the rate of non-responders to treatment.
To evaluate the efficacy and safety of fesoterodine in comparison to tolterodine and placebo for overactive bladder
The study was conducted between 2004 and 2006 to prove efficacy and tolerability of the antimuscarinic propiverine compared to placebo in children suffering from non-neurogenic overactive bladder and urinary incontinence.
Subjects with non-neurogenic over-active bladder will be enrolled. The hypothesis is that augmentation cystoplasty using an autologous neo-bladder construct will increase functional capacity and thereby reduce the number of micturition episodes per day in subjects with non-neurogenic over active bladder and urge predominant incontinence.
The primary objective of this pilot study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of direct instillations of Botulinum-A toxin/DMSO into the bladder via a catheter system as a means of treating women with symptoms of overactive bladder and secondary urinary incontinence. In doing so, we will focus on estimating the percentage of women who experience an improvement in their urinary incontinence symptoms at one month and three months following this novel instillation technique.
The purpose of this study is to determine the optimal dose of botulinum toxin type A injected in the detrusor muscle to improve urinary symptoms, urodynamic parameters and quality of life of continent women suffering from idiopathic overactive bladder.
The purpose of this study is to explore the effectiveness and safety of several doses of botulinum toxin type A in treating overactive bladder in patients with spinal cord injury.