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Active clinical trials for "Urinary Bladder, Overactive"

Results 301-310 of 730

Effectiveness of Microcurrents Therapy in Overactive Bladder.

Overactive BladderUrinary Incontinence

The purpose of this study is to investigate the effect on the overactive bladder in women using a care protocol plus the application of microcurrent patches during 1 hours per session compared to the effect of the same protocol plus placebo electric stimulation.

Completed22 enrollment criteria

Is 10 Injections of Bladder Botox Less Painful Than 20 Injections?

Overactive Bladder

The purpose of this research study is to help determine if 10 injections of Botox ® 100 units is less painful than 20 injections of Botox ® 100 units based on effectiveness in reducing urge incontinence episodes. Study will also be assessed for the pain of procedure and adverse outcomes of 20 injections versus 10 injections.

Completed18 enrollment criteria

Effect of Pulse Rate Changes on Clinical Outcome

Overactive Bladder SyndromeChronic Urinary Retention

Objectives: To evaluate the effect of pulse rate changes on the clinical response and stimulation related pain symptoms in sacral neuromodulation (SNM) treatment. Materials and Methods: This pilot study evaluated the effect of 4 different pulse rates (5.2Hz-10Hz-21Hz-40Hz) in patients with suboptimal response to SNM. The effect of each frequency was evaluated over test period of 6 days. To avoid carry over effect, stimulation was kept off for 24 hours between consecutive test periods. The last 3 days of every test period, a voiding diary (VD) and questionnaire was filled in. The changes on clinical response and pain symptoms were compared between the four pulse-rates using multivariate analysis. Results: Fifty patients were included of which 40 (80%) were female. Mean age was 55.5yr (SD 12.3). Forty-one patients (82%) had overactive bladder symptoms and 9 (18%) had chronic non-obstructive urinary retention. No significant difference was found regarding clinical outcome (VD and questionnaire) between the different pulse rates. Furthermore, none of the four pulse rates was significantly related to the occurrence of SNM-related pain. However, on individual basis, patients appear to benefit from changing the pulse rate concerning both treatment efficacy and stimulation related pain. Conclusions: On group level, none of the four pulse rates in this study appears to have a significantly different effect on clinical outcome or SNM-related pain. However, a tailor-made approach for optimizing treatment efficacy by changing the pulse rate might be useful.

Completed3 enrollment criteria

Combined Behavioral and Drug Treatment of Overactive Bladder in Men

Overactive BladderLower Urinary Tract Symptoms

The primary aim of this project is to evaluate the effectiveness of combined behavioral + drug therapy compared to behavioral treatment alone and drug therapy alone as a way to improve outcomes in the treatment of OAB symptoms in men. We hypothesize that combined therapy will result in better outcomes than either behavioral or drug therapy alone. The second aim is to compare two methods of implementing combined therapy: simultaneously as initial therapy vs. stepped therapy, in which therapies are combined following initial behavioral or drug therapy alone. The third aim is to examine the costs and cost-effectiveness of combined behavioral + drug therapy compared to behavioral or drug therapy alone.

Completed23 enrollment criteria

Safety and Efficacy Study of AGN-214868 in Patients With Idiopathic Overactive Bladder and Urinary...

Urinary BladderOveractive

This study will evaluate the safety and efficacy of AGN-214868 in patients with idiopathic overactive bladder (IOAB) and urinary incontinence.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Refractory Overactive Bladder: Sacral NEuromodulation v. BoTulinum Toxin Assessment (ROSETTA)

Urinary IncontinenceUrge

The purpose of this randomized, open-label, active-control trial is to compare the effectiveness of intra-detrusor botulinum toxin A (Botox A®, Allergan) versus sacral neuromodulation (InterStim®, Medtronic) for the treatment of refractory urge urinary incontinence. In addition, the study will evaluate select technical attributes of the interventions as well as the effect of these two interventions on other lower urinary tract and pelvic floor symptoms. Hypothesis: InterStim® therapy will result in a greater reduction in daily urge urinary incontinence episodes over the 6-month follow-up period as compared to Botox A® injection. A supplemental study investigates whether biological markers including those related to inflammation and connective tissue remodeling change following treatments with Botox A® and Interstim®.

Completed28 enrollment criteria

A Long-term Follow-up Study of Botulinum Toxin Type A in Patients With Overactive Bladder as a Result...

Overactive Bladder

The purpose of this study is to assess the long-term safety and effectiveness of botulinum toxin type A on patients with overactive bladder as a result of spinal cord injury or multiple sclerosis. This is a follow-up study to two Allergan sponsored studies (NCT00311376 and NCT00461292).

Completed6 enrollment criteria

A Study to Compare the Effectiveness and Safety of Fesoterodine and Placebo in an Elderly Population...

Urinary BladderOveractive

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.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

A Study to Test the Effects of Tolterodine Tartrate in Patients With Overactive Bladder (0000-107)...

Overactive Bladder

This study will design an alternative urodynamic platform to better evaluate treatment effects of medications for overactive bladder. Part II is dependent on results of Part I and may not be conducted.

Completed19 enrollment criteria

Combination Treatment With Doxazosin Plus TolterodineSR 2 mg Versus 4mg in Men With an Overactive...

Overactive BladderBenign Prostatic Hyperplasia

OAB occurs in approximately 50% to 75% of men with BPO and up to 38% of men with BPO continue to suffer from OAB after relief the obstruction.Symptoms of OAB are more bothersome than the voiding complaints of slow stream and hesitancy. However, the patients with both BPO and OAB are often not treated with muscarinic receptor antagonists due to concern that they will experience acute urinary retention. Tolterodine is a potent and pure muscarinic receptor antagonist that was developed specifically for the treatment of overactive bladder. Recently, studies revealed that tolterodine was effective, safe and well tolerated in adults with OAB and urodynamically confirmed BPO.However, the optimal dosage of antimuscarinic for the treatment of OAB coexisting BPO was not yet fully assessed. In real clinical situation, some patients complain voiding difficulty after addition of antimuscarinics and want to stop antimuscarinics.It is probable that a lower dosage of antimuscarinics combined with alpha-adrenergic antagonists can be used safely in OAB patients with BOO, with the same efficacy. This study is designed to investigate the optimal doses of tolterodine SR in combination with doxazosin in men with both BOO and OAB based on efficacy, safety, and tolerability.

Completed21 enrollment criteria
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