Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0042024 (incontinence)
13,409 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Six elderly volunteers (4 men and 2 women), suffering from urinary incontinence due to small capacity, hyper-reflexic bladders, were assessed cystometrically 1/2 h, 1 h and 4 h after an intramuscular injection of emepronium bromide (Cetiprin). The dose given was sufficient to raise serum levels of emepronium to approximately 10 times those that could be reached with an oral dose. Analysis of the results showed that there was no significant difference in the state of the bladder at any time. The study confirms that emepronium bromide is ineffective in increasing bladder capacity in subjects with small, hyper-reflexic bladders. It has no value, therefore, in the management of urinary incontinence in elderly patients with this condition.
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PMID:The lack of effect of intramuscular emepronium bromide for urinary incontinence. 704 3

The effect of 4 weeks' treatment with emepronium bromide in 20 incontinent female patients with detrusor hyperreflexia was compared to the effect in 20 patients who did not have uninhibited detrusor contractions during filling cystometry but who were unable to suppress a voluntarily induced detrusor contraction. In both groups, 65% benefited from the drug and no statistically significant differences were seen in the decrease in frequency of voiding and incontinence episodes during treatment. There were no differences between the groups for age, type and degree of urinary incontinence, and radiological findings of bladder suspension defects. In these patients it is important to perform cystometry, including detrusor reflex activation procedures and the testing of their ability to suppress a voluntarily induced detrusor contraction.
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PMID:Different cystometric types of deficient micturition reflex control in female urinary incontinence with special reference to the effect of parasympatholytic treatment. 723 44

Bladder instability provokes frequency, urgency, urge incontinence and enuresis in a great percentage of patients of both sexes, who undergo urodynamic examination when other clinical elements are not in evidence. The presence of bladder contractions of variable entity, even capable of inducing emptying, during filling are accompanied by a strong desire to micturate. Our study includes daily recordings of rhythm and quantity of micturitions and leaks, evaluation of urethral pressure, transurethral cystometry and uroflowmetry. The urethral pressure profile was performed with the technique of Brown and Wickham by infusing at 2 ml/min with 10-Ch catheter, withdrawn at a speed of 15 cm/min. Transurethral cystometry was performed by a continuous infusion at moderate speed (50 ml/min) of an isotonic solution at room temperature in a recumbent patient with two catheters in the bladder. When the contractions of the detrusor appear, we evaluate the pharmacological response to the filling with a myolitic agent (flavoxate) first, and with synthetic anticholinergic (emepronium bromide) after, with the purpose of discriminating the myogenic or neurogenic nature of the alteration and to propose suitable therapy.
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PMID:Urodynamic response of unstable bladder to flavoxate. 738 65

We studied 42 patients with urinary incontinence who demonstrated uninhibited detrusor contractions during cystometry. Each patient underwent urodynamic evaluation before and after the parenteral administration of propantheline bromide. Of these 42 patients 33 (79 per cent) had a positive response to propantheline: total abolition of uninhibited bladder contractions or 200 per cent increase in bladder capacity. Of these 33 patients 26 were treated with the oral drug and all but 1 had complete clinical response. Urinary retention occurred in half of the patients. These patients were managed with intermittent self-catheterization in addition to oral propantheline. None of the patients who failed to respond to the parenteral medication had a favorable response to the orally administered drug.
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PMID:Cystometric response to propantheline in detrusor hyperreflexia: therapeutic implications. 740 Dec 43

Pharmacotherapy with anticholinergic agents was studied in a total of 80 patients aged 65 years or older with chief complaints of urinary frequency (4 patients) and/or ugency incontinence (76 patients). The subjects were 45 men and 35 women at the age ranging between 65 and 92 (mean 73.7). The patients received anticholinergic agents (terodiline hydrochloride 24 mg/day, oxybutynin hydrochloride 6 mg/day, propantheline bromide 60 mg/day separately or in combination) for more than two weeks. Subjective symptoms and objective findings were assessed before and after the administration. In addition, according to the result of Hasegawa's dementia rating scale the patients were divided into dementia group and non-dementia group for further evaluation of the study drugs. As a result, cystometrogram revealed significant increase of maximum bladder capacity in either dementia group or non-dementia group. There was no significant difference in rate of objective improvement between both groups. On the other hand, rate of subjective improvement was significantly higher in non-dementia group (40%) than in dementia group (15%). As mentioned above, improvement of cystometrogram findings was not associated with improvement of subjective symptoms in the demented patients. This suggests that the major cause of incontinence in demented patients is not the bladder dysfunction but the specific conditions of demented patients such as agnosia and apraxia.
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PMID:[Anticholinergic therapy of urinary incontinence and urinary frequency associated with the elderly--with special reference to dementia]. 834 23

To investigate complaints of Gulf War veterans, epidemiologic, case-control and animal modeling studies were performed. Looking for OPIDP variants, our epidemiologic project studied 249 Naval Reserve construction battalion (CB24) men. Extensive surveys were drawn for symptoms and exposures. An existing test (PAI) was used for neuropsychologic. Using FACTOR, LOGISTIC and FREQ in 6.07 SAS, symptom clusters were sought with high eigenvalues from orthogonally rotated two-stage factor analysis. After factor loadings and Kaiser measure for sampling adequacy (0.82), three major and three minor symptom clusters were identified. Internally consistent by Cronbach's coefficient, these were labeled syndromes: (1) impaired cognition; (2) confusion-ataxia; (3) arthro-myo-neuropathy; (4) phobia-apraxia; (5) fever-adenopathy; and (6) weakness-incontinence. Syndrome variants identified 63 patients (63/249, 25%) with 91 syndromes. With pyridostigmine bromide as the drug in these drug-chemical exposures, syndrome chemicals were: (1) pesticide-containing flea and tick collars (P < 0.001); (2) alarms from chemical weapons attacks (P < 0.001), being in a sector later found to have nerve agent exposure (P < 0.04); and (3) insect repellent (DEET) (P < 0.001). From CB24, 23 cases, 10 deployed and 10 non-deployed controls were studied. Auditory evoked potentials showed dysfunction (P < 0.02), nystagmic velocity on rotation testing, asymmetry on saccadic velocity (P < 0.04), somatosensory evoked potentials both sides (right P < 0.03, left P < 0.005) and synstagmic velocity after caloric stimulation bilaterally (P-range, 0.02-0.04). Brain dysfunction was shown on the Halstead Impairment Index (P < 0.01), General Neuropsychological Deficit Scale (P < 0.03) and Trail Making part B (P < 0.03). Butylcholinesterase phenotypes did not trend for inherent abnormalities. Parallel hen studies at Duke University established similar drug-chemical delayed neurotoxicity. These investigations lend credibility that sublethal exposures to drug-chemical combinations caused delayed-onset neurotoxic variants.
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PMID:Epidemiological association in US veterans between Gulf War illness and exposures to anticholinesterases. 1002 6

Urinary incontinence has far-reaching medical, psychological, social, and economic effects. The objectives of this descriptive study were to examine utilization patterns and discontinuation rates of various pharmacologic agents used to treat symptoms of overactive bladder, primarily urge incontinence (UI), and to estimate the prevalence of urinary incontinence in the study population. Patient-level data regarding specific drugs used to treat UI and the use of diapers or pads over a 9-month period from October 1995 to May 1996 were retrospectively extracted from the medication databases of 9 Department of Veterans Affairs medical centers. A total of 2233 male patients were included in the analyses. Most patients were receiving oxybutynin chloride (39.8%), dicyclomine hydrochloride (16.0%), or imipramine hydrochloride (13.9%), and the remaining 30.3% were using flavoxate hydrochloride, propantheline bromide, hyoscyamine sulfate, and adult diapers or pads. Overall, 72.1% of patients had been prescribed daily dosages within the recommended dosing ranges for these medications. The majority (91.3%) of patients had not switched to another UI medication during the study period. Based on a chronic disease index, 47.6% of patients had 2 or fewer chronic diseases. Using pooled prevalence estimates, the estimated percentage of patients who had ever experienced UI in this population ranged from 7.4% to 20.8%; however, a considerably smaller percentage were taking medications for the treatment of UI. The results of this study suggest that oxybutynin, dicyclomine, and imipramine are the agents most commonly used to treat urinary incontinence within Veterans Affairs medical centers. The majority of patients who received a prescription for one of these drugs did not routinely refill the medication over the course of the study. There are many reasons for patients not to refill a prescription (eg, ineffectiveness, side effects, complications, obtaining the drug from another source), but the present study did not address the causes.
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PMID:Treatment of urge incontinence in Veterans Affairs medical centers. 1039 81

Disorders of the lower abdomen were often associated with sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) or related conditions. The urological diagnostic workup and treatment was based on the idea that technical devices and objective scientific examination methods would lead to targeted success. The fact that illnesses such as urinary retention, urinary incontinence, urge incontinence, orchitis or urethritis often implicated psychosomatic complications and had a possibly far more important impact on sexual life did not play a role in the early years of urology. In contrast, the concepts of naturopaths and homoeopaths were based on the humoral pathology view that was rejected by conventional medicine after 1850. They advocated abstinence and the use of hydrotherapeutic measures instead of urological surgery or potassium bromide treatment commonly prescribed by psychiatrists. The success of the naturopaths and homeopaths was based on several factors: they relied on taking into account a comprehensive patient history including psychosomatic factors and a combined dietary and pharmacological treatment. Naturopathic or homeopathic treatment was cheaper and more acceptable to the patient than conventional medical treatment or use of catheters and dilators. In addition, lay practitioners often came from the same milieu as their patients, so that the physician-patient communication, which is extremely important for psychosomatic disorders, was much easier.
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PMID:[Urology and alternative medicine (1900-1970)]. 2961 84


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