View clinical trials related to Urinary Bladder, Overactive.
Filter by:To explore the effects of fesoterodine when used in a flexible dose manner
Prospective, double-blind, double-dummy, 2-arm, parallel-group, design. Flexible dose regimen for solifenacin succinate, fixed dose treatment regimen for tolterodine. Assessment of OAB symptoms by patient diaries.
Prospective, double-blind, double-randomised, 2-arm parallel group study. Optimal dose increase. Primary efficacy assessment of OAB symptoms by patient diaries.
The drug being studied, fesoterodine fumarate helps prevent the bladder neck opening at unwanted times and has been shown to help patients with overactive bladder syndrome pass urine less frequently than before treatment. It is postulated that this drug will also prove effective in elderly patients (aged > 65 years) and that the ability to change dose between 4 and 8mg will allow each patient to have an optimised treatment.
The open-label dose-escalating two-centre study was designed to assess the pharmacokinetics as well as safety, tolerability and efficacy parameters of propiverine in patients 5-10 years of age suffering from frequency-urgency-syndrome and urinary incontinence indicative of detrusor overactivity (overactive bladder) for determination of the recommended dose in children.
The objective of this surveillance is to collect information about 1) adverse drug reaction not expected from the LPD (unknown adverse drug reaction), 2) the incidence of adverse drug reactions in this surveillance, and 3)factors considered to affect the safety and/or efficacy of this drug.
The investigators purpose is to perform a pilot study evaluating the efficacy in hypnotherapy in treating women with Overactive Bladder Symptoms (urinary urgency symptoms and urinary frequency). Approximately half the women in the study will receive "standard care" (performing a voiding diary, Pelvic Floor exercises, and timed voiding) and the other half will receive "standard care" and 3 hypnotherapy sessions. The investigators will compare the groups using a validated overactive bladder questionnaire and compare voiding diaries to evaluate urinary frequency at the end of the sessions/study completion.
- Data are obtained of Emselex in routine treatment of Overactive Bladder. The general objectives are to evaluate the product safety, compatibility, efficacy and patient acceptance.
This is a safety extension study of DR-OXY-301 at pre-selected sites. Subjects who complete the DR-OXY-301 study are eligible to participate. The duration of this extension study will be up to approximately 42 weeks. Subjects will have physical and laboratory exams, including blood draws at each scheduled visit and colposcopic examination of the vagina and cervix. As in DR-OXY-301, subjects will be required to insert a vaginal ring; replacing it every 4 weeks. Subjects will also be required to keep a daily record of the number of times and the total amount of time the ring was outside the body each day and the reason for voluntary removal.
Interstitial cystitis (IC)/chronic pelvic pain syndrome (CPPS) is a clinical syndrome of pelvic pain and/or urinary urgency/frequency in absence of a specific cause such as bacterial infection or damage to the bladder. The pathogenetic mechanisms of IC/CPPS are as yet undefined and it is largely this lack of knowledge, which precludes a systematic therapeutic approach. Experimental evidence, including results from the animal models of cystitis and the knock-out mice, indicate a participation of tachykinin receptors, especially the NK1R, in neurogenic inflammation, which is considered an important element of the IC complex. However, there is very scant information about the molecular mechanisms of IC in humans, or of the types of receptors, which participate in neurogenic inflammation. Based on our molecular biological know-how and the clinical expertise, we propose to investigate the role of the tachykinin and bradykinin receptors and their signalling partners in CPPS and bladder dysfunction in humans.