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Query: UMLS:C0010200 (
cough
)
23,843
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Stress urinary incontinence was evaluated urodynamically in 86 women in private urologic practice. While 31 patients had failed prior surgical repairs and 58 patients (67.4 per cent) reported irritative symptoms of frequency,
nocturia
, urgency and urge incontinence unstable bladders were found in only 5 women (5.8 per cent) over-all, in 6.5 per cent of those patients failing a previous operation and in 8.6 per cent of those patients with irritative symptoms. Urethral pressure profiles were decreased mildly in patients with, compared to those without, stress urinary incontinence but considerable overlap existed and no improvement was seen in 20 patients cured with an operation. Excretory urography, post-voiding residual urine volumes and sphincter electromyography usually were normal. Women with stress urinary incontinence consistently showed poor transmission of
cough
to the urethra so that the intravesical pressure exceeded the intraurethral pressure.
...
PMID:Urodynamics in stress urinary incontinence. 57 61
Twenty-two clinically continent women with severe genitourinary prolapse were evaluated urodynamically to determine the prevalence of urodynamic abnormalities that could lead to potential urinary incontinence. Urodynamic testing found an occult incontinence disorder in 13 women (59%), of whom four had urine loss during
cough
pressure profiles after pessary placement, four had uninhibited detrusor contractions during retrograde medium-fill water cystometry, and five had both stress urinary incontinence and an unstable bladder. Therefore, nine of the 22 patients (41%) had uninhibited detrusor contractions during urodynamic testing. However, uroflowmetry did not reveal voiding dysfunction in this group, although peak flow rates appeared to be lower in the subgroup of women manifesting uninhibited detrusor contractions. Associated symptoms of frequency,
nocturia
, and urgency occurred in 41% of the women in this study; four of nine (44%) who had normal urodynamic test results, five of 13 (38%) who had abnormal test results, and five of nine (56%) who had an unstable bladder. Therefore, associated symptoms could not be used to determine which women would have abnormal urodynamic test results. These preliminary results suggest that women with genitourinary prolapse may be at risk for an occult incontinence disorder that is masked by the prolapse and that could manifest after corrective surgery for prolapse. Urodynamic testing is suggested for women with genitourinary prolapse who present with or without symptoms of incontinence, so that more data can be obtained to determine the importance of abnormal test results.
...
PMID:Prevalence of abnormal urodynamic test results in continent women with severe genitourinary prolapse. 155 72
The aim of the study was to introduce an anatomical classification for the management of urinary dysfunction based on the Integral Theory, a new connective tissue theory for female incontinence. Eighty-five unselected patients, aged 27-83 years, 12 with pure stress symptoms and 73 with mixed incontinence symptoms, were classified as having laxity in the anterior, middle or posterior zones of the vagina, using specific symptoms, signs and urodynamic parameters summarized in a pictorial algorithm. Special ambulatory surgical techniques, which included the creation of neoligaments, repaired specific connective tissue defects in the anterior (intravaginal slingplasty (IVS), n = 85), middle (cystocele repair, n = 6), or posterior zones (uterine prolapse repair, n = 31, or infracoccygeal sacropexy, n = 33). Almost all patients were discharged within 24 hours of surgery, without postoperative catheterization, returning to fairly normal activities within 7-14 days. At (mean) 21-month follow-up cure rates were: stress incontinence 88% (n = 85), frequency 85% (n = 42),
nocturia
80% (n = 30), urge incontinence 86% (n = 74), emptying symptoms 50% (n = 65). Mean objective urine loss (
cough
stress test) was reduced from 8.9 g preoperatively to 0.3 g postoperatively, and mean residual urine >50 ml from 110 ml to 63 ml, P = <0.02. Pre- and postoperative urodynamics indicated that detrusor instability was not associated with surgical failure. Two new directions, based on the Integral Theory, are presented for the management of female urinary dysfunction, an anatomical classification which delineates three zones of vaginal damage, and a series of ambulatory surgical operations which repair these defects. The operations are fairly simple, safe, effective and easily learnt by any practising gynecologist.
...
PMID:New ambulatory surgical methods using an anatomical classification of urinary dysfunction improve stress, urge and abnormal emptying. 955 90
This study described sleep in a heterogeneous sample of breast cancer patients using the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) and examined the relation between sleep disturbance and health-related quality of life as measured by the Rand 36-Item Health Survey. Chemotherapy and radiation therapy were explored as predictors of sleep disturbance in breast cancer patients, and the sleep characteristics of breast cancer patients were compared to the sleep characteristics of a sample of medical patients with general medical conditions. Results showed that 61% of breast cancer patients had significant sleep problems. Sleep was characterized by reduced total sleep time with sleep frequently being disturbed by pain,
nocturia
, feeling too hot, and
coughing
or snoring loudly. Despite the frequency of significant sleep disturbance, pharmacological and cognitive-behavioral treatments of sleep problems were observed to be inadequate. Limited evidence was found for the role of chemotherapy and radiation therapy in the sleep disturbance of breast cancer patients, and the general pattern of sleep disturbance in breast cancer patients was not significantly different than that observed in medical patients with general medical conditions. Breast cancer patients having significant sleep problems had greater deficits in many areas of health-related quality of life. The implications of the findings and study limitations are discussed.
...
PMID:Sleep and quality of life in breast cancer patients. 1254 47
Since urinary incontinence is one of the most frequent female health problems and may severely affect a woman's life quality, knowledge about its pathophysiology, evaluation and therapy is very important. Even basic diagnostic tests can determine the type of incontinence (stress or urge urinary incontinence) thus permitting appropriate therapy to be initiated. The patients history, micturition diary, clinical evaluation, perineal ultrasound and urinalysis are important parts of these basic diagnostic tests. The positive stress
cough
test and the typical symptoms such as urine loss during physical activity point to the diagnosis of stress urinary incontinence. Frequency,
nocturia
and urgency with or without urine loss as well as more objective criteria such as micturition diaries and urinalysis indicate urge incontinence. Questions to help determine how quality of life is affected by the incontinence symptoms aid in deciding how urgent the treatment is. An urodynamic evaluation together with perineal ultrasound and cystoscopy is performed in patients with complex or recurrent urinary incontinence after surgery or with micturition disorders.
...
PMID:[Urinary incontinence in the woman--pathophysiology and diagnosis]. 1280 94
The normal pelvic floor functions as a balanced synergistic system composed of muscle, connective tissue (CT), and nerve components, with CT being the most vulnerable. The aim was to address a wide range of pelvic floor dysfunctions by strengthening all possible components of the system with minimal time loss, weaving every element of treatment seamlessly into a daily routine. The study group consisted of patients from a tertiary referral pelvic floor clinic who, after testing, opted for nonsurgical treatment of their problem. There were no exclusion criteria. The patients had presented with symptoms which included stress, urge, frequency,
nocturia
, abnormal emptying and pelvic pain, and the fate of these was tracked prospectively. The regime comprised four visits in 3 months. An anatomical classification guided diagnosis of anatomical defects in the anterior, middle and posterior compartments of the vagina. HRT was administered to all patients, electrotherapy 20 min per day for 4 weeks, squeezing 3 x 12 per day, reverse pushdowns 3 x 12 per day and squatting or equivalent up to 20 min per day. Of 147 patients (mean age 52.5 years), 53% completed the programme. Median QOL improvement reported was 66%, mean
cough
stress test urine loss reduced from 2.2 g (range 0-20.3 g) to 0.2 g (range 0-1.4 g), p =<0.005, and 24-h pad loss from a mean of 3.7 g (range 0-21.8 g) to a mean of 0.76 g (range 0-9.3 m), p =<0.005. Frequency,
nocturia
and pelvic pain were significantly improved ( p=<0.005). Residual urine reduced from mean 202 ml to mean 71 ml ( p=<0.005). This method extends indications for nonsurgical therapy beyond stress incontinence, and the results appear to encourage this approach. Confirmation by other investigators is required.
...
PMID:Synergistic non-surgical management of pelvic floor dysfunction: second report. 1501 37
A prospective, single-centre study to assess the outcome of incontinence surgery in the first 120 consecutive patients who had tension-free vaginal tape (TVT) by a single surgeon. All patients were initially seen at 3 months postsurgery, with a
cough
provocation test, measurement of residual urine volume and a satisfaction survey. At a mean of 26 months (6-42 months) after surgery, a validated telephone interview was performed. The operation was performed in accordance with the original technique described by Ulmsten et al. [Int Urogynecol J Pelvic Floor Dysfunct 1996; 7: 81-5]. A total of 87 of 120 patients completed the study with the others either not complying or having died. Sixty-three (72.4%) patients were completely dry on
cough
provocation test. Of these, four (4.5%) had a slow stream and 10 (11.4%) suffered persistent urgency. The remaining 24 patients had varying degrees of leakage (operative failure). Sixteen (18.3%) patients subjectively considered the procedure to have failed at 3 months follow-up, either because leakage occurred once or more a day, and/or the persistence of the preoperative frequency/urgency syndrome. Of these 16 TVT failures, two had previous pelvic radiotherapy, two had double incontinence and eight had TVT for recurrent incontinence. Among the failures, 81.3% had mixed incontinence with predominant urge and
nocturia
three times per twenty four hours. Our study highlights the need for selection when performing TVT. We recommend that TVT be performed for those who have simple stress incontinence failing conservative measures (pelvic floor exercises and physiotherapy), with no history of incontinence surgery, pelvic radiotherapy, faecal or mixed incontinence.
...
PMID:Tension-free vaginal tape: avoiding failure. 1585 46
Insomnia is highly prevalent in patients with chronic disease including chronic heart failure (CHF) and is a significant contributing factor to fatigue and poor quality of life. The pathophysiology of CHF often leads to fatigue, due to nocturnal symptoms causing sleep disruption, including
cough
, orthopnea, paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea, and
nocturia
. Inadequate cardiac function may lead to hypoxemia or poor perfusion of the cerebrum, skeletal muscle, or visceral body organs, which result in organ dysfunction or failure and may contribute to fatigue. Sleep disturbances negatively affect all dimensions of quality of life and is related to increased risk of comorbidities, including depression. This article reviews insomnia in CHF, cardiac medication side-effects related to sleep disturbances, and treatment options.
...
PMID:Insomnia and chronic heart failure. 1875 45
Quite often patients assume that any new onset of urge incontinence or
nocturia
is recurrent urinary incontinence. Is it possible to consider any similar situation as the recurrence of urinary incontinence? No, of course not. However, if you put at the forefront a patient satisfaction with the overall result of the surgery, rather than a formal negative
cough
test, the picture will be somewhat different. On the one hand, it brings us back to criteria of surgery success, and on the other to the indications for repeat surgery. All this highlights the importance of thorough examination of patients with urinary incontinence. Patient evaluation begins with taking a complete medical history, reviewing chief complaints and filling in urination diary. If a re-operation is indicated, the following surgical options should be considered: sling operations, colposuspension or tapes using patient own tissue. The choice of surgical treatment for recurrent urinary incontinence should be based on the results of a thorough evaluation of the individual patient, including urodynamic parameters and supplementary imaging studies. The most important factors influencing the choice of method of re-surgery were the type of the previous operation, the results of urodynamic studies, and the preference and experience of the surgeon.
...
PMID:[Recurrent urinary incontinence in women: causes and treatments]. 2824 48
A 6-year-old girl presented acutely with worsening frontal headaches. She had a 3-month history of lethargy, reduced appetite, weight loss,
cough
and intermittent fevers. A chest X-ray showed a left upper lobe consolidation, and a CT head showed multiple enhancing lesions with significant surrounding oedema in both cerebral hemispheres. Due to the strong suspicion of tuberculosis (TB), she was admitted and treated with anti-TB therapy and steroids. Following this, pulmonary infection with
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
was confirmed by a positive PCR from induced sputum. Cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) analysis was normal and tested negative for
M. tuberculosis
on PCR. During her first week of treatment, she developed polyuria,
nocturia
and polydipsia and was diagnosed with central diabetes insipidus. She was started on desmopressin which rapidly improved her symptoms, and she was continued on desmopressin for 3 months. Currently, she remains well and has shown a good response to TB treatment.
...
PMID:Cerebral tuberculomas in a 6-year-old girl causing central diabetes insipidus. 3042 May 62
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