View clinical trials related to Urinary Bladder, Overactive.
Filter by:AMBER AURA-2 study (Augmenting Urinary Reflex Activity 2) is a short-duration (6 month) safety and electrophysiological study using an implanted Amber UI system and two electrode leads to provide closed-loop pudendal nerve stimulation for the treatment of urinary incontinence.
A randomized clinical study to evaluate the safety and efficacy of using the Beta 3 agonist drug (Mirabegron) combined with standard behavioral therapy in comparison to using the anticholinergic drug (Solifenacin) combined with behavioral therapy, for children with non-neurogenic voiding dysfunction refractory to behavioral therapy alone, using improvement of dysfunctional voiding symptom score as a primary measurement of efficacy.
The purpose of this prospective, multicenter study is to assess the safety and efficacy of tibial neuromodulation using the Medtronic Tibial Neuromodulation (TNM) system.
A single site, double-blinded, randomized controlled trial for postmenopausal women with urinary frequency, urgency, nocturia with or without urgency urinary incontinence symptoms. Patient's will be randomized between 0.01% vaginal estradiol cream with placebo oral pill or daily 50 milligrams oral Mirabegron with a placebo vaginal cream for 12 weeks.
Open label Study to Evaluate the Efficacy of the Home Based Electrical Transcutaneous NeuroModulation (eTNM) Treatment Via Nerve Stimulator URIS I in the Treatment of Overactive Bladder.
To collect physiological signals at several timepoints during the therapy evaluation period.
Research question: A wealth of existing research has established the independent effectiveness of mirabegron and neuromodulation in the treatment of overactive bladder syndrome. Optimizing the use of these effective and well-tolerated treatment modalities is an important clinical goal and warrants further research. The primary aim of this trial is to answer the questions: how does varying the treatment sequence involving mirabegron and transcutaneous tibial nerve stimulation (TTNS) affect efficacy and patient acceptance and what is the second-line efficacy of either treatment modality? Primary objective: To evaluate improvement in storage symptoms, as measured by changes in Overactive Bladder Symptom Score (OABSS), International Prostate Symptom Score (IPSS) and parameters of voiding diary, in overactive bladder (OAB) patients receiving mirabegron or TTNS as first-line therapy when crossed over to second-line therapy with the opposite treatment modality Secondary objectives: To evaluate improvement in symptoms, as measured by changes in OABSS, IPSS and parameters of voiding diary, on first-line therapy with mirabegron or TTNS followed by combination multi-modal therapy To evaluate the effect of multi-modal treatment approach on patient's perception of treatment satisfaction and symptom control To evaluate urodynamic profiles of patients treated with multi-modal approach
Overactive Bladder is characterised by (I) Urgency: the sudden and compelling desire to pass urine with or without accidental leakage; (II) Frequency: the need to pass urine far more regularly than is considered normal; and (III) Nocturia: the need to pass urine several times during the night. This study aims to investigate the feasibility, acceptability and preliminary efficacy of a digital intervention (the NUIG OAB App) for overactive bladder. Furthermore, this study will help determine the most appropriate outcomes for use in the future definitive RCT and the effect size for future sample size calculations. Participants will complete an 8-week intervention designed to reduce the symptoms of OAB, delivered through the NUIG OAB App. Participants will be asked to complete online surveys at baseline, 4 weeks and 8 weeks and an in-app Bladder Diary at weeks 1 and 8. There will be no in-person contact with participants by the study team.
To evaluate the safety and durability of the TheraNova Neuromodulation System in overactive bladder (OAB) patients.
The purpose of this study is to assess the effectiveness and safety of acupuncture for treating overactive bladder in adults.