Treatment of Stress Urinary Incontinence Via Smartphone
Female Stress Urinary IncontinenceThe purpose of this study is to determine whether treatment of stress urinary incontinence (SUI) via smartphone is effective.
A Comparison of Electrical Pudendal Nerve Stimulation and Pelvic Floor Muscle Training for Female...
Stress Urinary IncontinenceThe purpose of this study is to determine whether electrical pudendal nerve stimulation is more effective than pelvic floor muscle training with Transvaginal electrical stimulation in treating female stress incontinence.
Combined Treatment for Mixed Incontinence
Urinary IncontinenceStress2 moreThe overarching goal of this randomized trial is to estimate the effect of combined midurethral sling (MUS) and peri-operative behavioral/pelvic floor therapy (BPTx) compared to MUS alone on successful treatment of MUI symptoms in 472 women. Secondary objectives include estimating the effect of combined treatment compared to MUS on improving overactive bladder (OAB) and stress urinary incontinence (SUI) outcomes separately, need for additional treatment, time to failure and identifying predictors of poor outcomes in this MUI population. A supplemental study, The Human Microbiome Study of ESTEEM, will evaluate the urinary and vaginal microbiome as it relates to women with MUI, their treatment and unaffected controls.
Group Learning Achieves Decreased Incidents of Lower Urinary Symptoms
Urinary IncontinenceStress2 moreThis three-site randomized controlled trial compares the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a group-administered behavioral treatment program to no treatment. Women with stress, urgency, or mixed urinary incontinence will be recruited and screened centrally, evaluated clinically at each of three study sites, and random assigned to one of two treatment arms: 1. Group behavioral treatment or 2. No treatment. Group treatment modalities have the potential to reach a larger population of older women with urinary incontinence, not only in the traditional medical settings, but also in community settings. The investigators hypothesize that group behavioral treatment will be more effective than no treatment. The investigators hypothesize that the group treatment will be cost-effective compared to no treatment.
Stem Cell Therapy for Treatment of Female Stress Urinary Incontinence
Urinary IncontinenceStressThis study evaluates the effectiveness of mesenchymal stem cells in treatment of stress urinary incontinence due to intrinsic sphincter deficiency; in which the problem is weakness or damage of the sphincter muscle responsible for continence. Mesenchymal stem cells are undifferentiated cells which can undergo self-renewal & differentiation into other cell types like muscle cells; thus can be used to regenerate the damaged sphincter muscles. In this study mesenchymal stem cells will be obtained from bone marrow from the patient, processed, & then re-injected periurethrally. Effectiveness will be compared to that of the surgical treatment (tension-free vaginal tape).
A Chinese Herbal Decoction for Stress Urinary Incontinence
Urinary IncontinenceStressThe purpose of this study is to determine whether Yiqi Suoquan Tang, a Chinese Herbal decoction, is effective in the treatment of female stress urinary incontinence.
Effectiveness of Kegel Exercise Device in Strengthening Pelvic Floor and Treating Urinary Incontinence...
Stress Urinary IncontinenceSexual DysfunctionThis study will assess the effectiveness of a new pelvic floor exercise device in strengthening pelvic floor muscles and treating urinary incontinence among women who are experiencing symptoms of pelvic floor weakness. The study will be conducted over 12 weeks and results will be collected through self-assessment questionnaires and clinical pelvic examination. Effectiveness outcomes will be tracked over the duration of the trial and measured against historical symptoms.
A Clinical Study to Assess the Safety of a Disposable Intra-vaginal Device for Stress Urinary Incontinence...
Stress Urinary IncontinenceThis study will evaluate the safety of the pessary device by objective evaluation of vaginal wall integrity and subjective assessment of comfort during in-use conditions.
ATLAS: Ambulatory Treatments for Leakage Associated With Stress
Stress Urinary IncontinenceUrinary IncontinenceStress urinary incontinence is the uncontrollable leakage of urine with physical effort or stress, such as coughing, sneezing, or exercise. Treatment for stress incontinence can be surgical or non-surgical. Different non-surgical treatments include pelvic muscle exercises and pessary use. Pelvic muscle exercises (often known as "Kegel" exercises) train and strengthen the pelvic muscles and improve incontinence. A pessary is a medical device that fits inside the vagina to give the urethra and bladder extra support and prevent or reduce urinary incontinence. Exercises and pessary use can help women with stress incontinence but it is not known which treatment is better, or if a combination of the two treatments at the same time is best. This study will determine whether pelvic muscle training and exercises, pessary use, or a combination of both exercises and pessary is most effective at improving incontinence in women. The study's primary hypothesis is that pessary use is more effective than pelvic muscle exercises after 3 months of treatment.
Trans-Obturator Tape Versus Trans-Vaginal Tape for Stress Urinary Incontinence in Women
Stress Urinary IncontinenceStress urinary incontinence (SUI) is a health concern for many women. The transvaginal tape (TVT) surgery has become a common procedure to address the problem. Another surgery is now available, trans-obturator tape (TOT). The investigators will compare these 2 approaches to dealing with SUI and follow the women for 1 year. Women will also be followed at 5 years after surgery.