View clinical trials related to Overactive Bladder.
Filter by:Patients with symptoms of overactive bladder suffer from frequent micturition, urinary incontinence and recurrent urinary tract infections. Intravesical injections with botulinum toxin A can be used as a second-line therapy for this purpose. Intravesical botulinum toxin A injections can be performed under general anesthesia, regional anesthesia, sedoanalgesia and local anesthesia. Which form of anesthesia is used varies greatly from region to region. As these patients are often elderly and morbid, the lowest-risk and least stressful anesthesia method should be used. The lowest-risk anesthesia method that can be used is local anesthesia. Currently, there are no guidelines that describe the use of standardized protocols for local anesthesia. The aim of this study is to show that the use of local anesthesia in this context is not inferior to the use of sedoanalgesia. All patients with overactive bladder symptoms who fulfill the inclusion criteria and present at the Urogynecology Outpatient Clinic of the Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics at the LKH Hochsteiermark in Leoben within 24 months will be invited to participate in the study. The main outcome measure is pain, secondary outcome measures are quality of life, patient satisfaction, incontinence score, operation time and length of stay in the recovery room, acceptance of repeating the procedure under local anesthesia, satisfaction with the type of anesthesia method, side effects/complications and duration of inpatient stay. The study will be randomized into 2 arms (local anesthesia/sedoanalgesia) with a 1:1 ratio to carry out the intravesical injection with botulinum toxin A.
A prospective observational cohort trial to study the effects of CGRP inhibitors (CGRPi) on lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) and bladder/pelvic pain. Candidates for either CGRPi or an alternative therapy for refractory migraines (OnabotulinumtoxinA (BoNTA) extracranial muscle injections) with baseline LUTS will be recruited. The investigators will assess LUTS and pelvic pain using validated symptom and quality-of-life questionnaires, pretreatment and at 3 months post-treatment follow-up, comparing change in symptoms based on treatment received.
The objective is to understand and evaluate the effectiveness of a deprescribing intervention in primary care, specifically targeting medications for overactive bladder in individuals aged 65 or older.
The goal of this observational study is to evaluate efficacy and safety of sacral neuromodulation in neurogenic patients compared to non-neurogenic (idiopathic) patients. [. The main question[s] it aims to answer are: - determine efficacy and safety of the therapy in neurogenic patients. - compare outcomes of the therapy to idiopathic patients. If there is a comparison group: Researchers will compare the outcomes of the therapy between the neurogenic and non-neurogenic subset of patients.
This is a multicenter, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study designed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Botulinus Toxin Type A for Injection (HengLi®) in patients with overactive bladder (OAB) . Approximately 216 subjects will be enrolled. Subjects will be randomized 2:1 to receive intradetrusor injection of Botulinus Toxin Type A for Injection (HengLi®) 100 U or placebo. The study contains two parts: core double-blinded phase and extension phase. In the core double-blinded phase, eligible subjects must attend three study visits posttreatment 12 weeks. During the extension phase, subjects must also attend three study visits (12 weeks). The primary efficacy variables is the change from baseline in the daily average frequency of micturition at week 6 after the first treatment.A 3-day paper bladder diary will be used before each study visits (screening period, the second week, the sixth week, the twelfth week, the fourteenth week, the eighteenth week and the twenty fourth week ) to collect all OAB symptoms (episodes of urgency, incontinence, micturition and nocturia) and volume per voidSafety parameters will also be measured, including adverse events, vital signs (pulse and blood pressure) and clinical laboratory tests (haematology, serum chemistry and urinanalysis).
The purpose of this study is to determine whether transcutaneous sacral nerve stimulation (TENS SNS) versus percutaneous tibial nerve stimulation (PTNS) is a more effective therapeutic option for subjects with idiopathic overactive bladder (OAB) who have failed conventional therapy. Our primary hypothesis is that TENS therapy is a more effective treatment option due to ease of use and improved subject compliance with this form of therapy.