Pelvital Stress Urinary Incontinence Training Device: P-SUIT
IncontinenceThe purpose of this investigation is to compare the clinical benefits of using the Pelvital product, in comparison to a sham procedure as a noninvasive treatment for female incontinence
Vesair Continued Access Trial
Stress Urinary IncontinenceSingle arm study of the Vesair Balloon in postmenopausal women.
A Pilot Clinical Trial of TENA Identifi in the Nursing Home Setting
Urinary IncontinenceThe purpose of this study is to prospectively compare a standard of care manual toileting protocol (e.g., "check and change" strategy) to toileting patterns recorded by the TENA Identifi system in identifying incontinence patterns and events, and, whether such data differentially improve a care planning strategy, nursing effort, product use, and wet-time for urinary incontinence.
Use of the Leva Incontinence System in Treating Bladder Incontinence.
Stress Urinary IncontinenceThis open-label proof-of-concept study is designed to evaluate the impact of the leva digital incontinence system on the treatment of stress and mixed urinary incontinence in women over a six week period. Subjects will participate in a 2.5 minute exercise program twice daily (performed at a clinic with therapist assistance 5x weekly, and at home once daily on weekdays and twice daily on weekends. Validated surveys (UDI-6, IIQ-7 and PGI-I) will be used to evaluate symptom relief. A battery of pelvic floor muscle exercises will be performed weekly to evaluate progress in muscle strengthening.
Pharmacological Enhancement for Nocturnal Incontinence in Orthotopic Bladder Substitute
IncontinenceUrinary Incontinence1 moreIn this randomised trial, we hypothesised that mebeverine could enhance nocturnal continenece of Orthotopic Bladder Substitute (OBS) patients by decreasing the frequency and reduce maximum amplitude of uninhibited contractions of OBS ileum, and consequently it would increase the OBS capacity
The Influence of the Body Posture Correcting Therapy on Pelvic Floor Muscles Function
Urinary Incontinence,StressThe purpose of this study is to assess the influence of the body posture correcting therapy on pelvic floor muscles function and urinary incontinence problem.
Study to Determine Effects of Vesicare on Return to Continence Post - Radical Prostatectomy (Part...
Urinary IncontinenceProstate cancer is the most common non-cutaneous malignancy in men and is the 2nd leading cause of death from cancer in men. Radical prostatectomy is one of the treatment options available for organ-confined disease. Over 100,000 radical prostatectomies cases (total removal of the cancerous prostate by surgery) are performed in the United States yearly. Unfortunately nearly all of the men undergoing surgery report diminished Quality of Life (QOL) scores due in part due to a postoperative incontinence which may require the use of multiple urinary pads per day. Many of these men also report debilitating irritative voiding symptoms of urinary urgency and frequency, and have overall decreased urinary satisfaction scores. Abatement of these symptoms can take up to one year in men, and in 5-20% of patients symptoms may persist for longer periods. Our recent published findings suggest that instability in the bladder muscle is likely an underlying etiology in postoperative urinary incontinence. This 'Detrusor Muscle' instability results in excess contractions of the urinary bladder ('urgency to urinate'), and can result in the feeling of needing to urinate more frequently. Consistent with this hypothesis of detrusor muscle instability, men with postoperative dribbling had more complaints with urgency, frequency and bother scores when queried with validated questionnaires. We suspect that a transient bladder muscle contraction may overcome the urinary sphincter valve resistance and result in the patient's dribbling of urine. By treating the bladder muscle instability, we expect improved postoperative continence and improved quality of life in patients after undergoing surgery for total removal of a cancerous prostate. This pilot study will assess the statistical requirements for the number of subjects needed for a fully 'powered' randomized prospective study to fully evaluate whether medications such as solifenacin significantly improve patients' quality of urinary life and improve postoperative urinary incontinence after surgery. *This study has been modified from the original protocol with the clinicaltrials.gov ID: NCT00581061.
Safety and Effectiveness of a Non-invasive Neuromodulation Device on Urgency Urinary Incontinence...
Overactive BladderThe purpose of this study is to evaluate the change from baseline between the active and sham treatment groups in the treatment of urgency (urinary) incontinence episodes (leaks).
A Pilot Study to Evaluate Safety and Performance of Neuromuscular Electrical Stimulation With the...
Stress Urinary IncontinenceThis is a pilot clinical study taking place at one site in Berlin, Germany using Neuromuscular Electrical Stimulation (NMES) to stimulate the pelvic floor muscles of 20 women suffering from stress urinary incontinence. This involves a 12 week, 30 minute, 5 days out of 7 set treatment program with the device. After the 12 week treatment programme the subjects will be asked to perform daily set exercises for a further 14 weeks.
A Pre-Market Study of the American Medical Systems (AMS) Transobturator Male Sling System for the...
Urinary IncontinenceStressThe purpose of this study is to obtain surgical technique data for use in physician education and training and to collect early clinical outcomes data for future publication.