Specific gene expression patterns identified in women with stress incontinence
September 2nd 2005General patterns of genetic expression have been identified in postmenopausal women with stress urinary incontinence that are not present in postmenopausal women without the condition. This is the first step toward being able to identify patients most at risk for stress incontinence early on, with the eventual hope of helping to prevent the condition, said researchers from the University of Rochester (NY) Medical Center.
Two-pronged approach relieves refractory CPPS pain
September 1st 2005San Antonio--A combination of physical and psychological therapy for chronic pelvic pain syndrome (CPPS, or chronic nonbacterial prostatitis) can provide relief for many patients who have pain refractory to conventional treatments, according to researchers from Stanford (CA) University.
Two-pronged approach relieves refractory CPPS pain
September 1st 2005San Antonio--A combination of physical and psychological therapy for chronic pelvic pain syndrome (CPPS, or chronic nonbacterial prostatitis) can provide relief for many patients who have pain refractory to conventional treatments, according to researchers from Stanford (CA) University.
BMI, smoking, and HRT use influence risk of late-life incontinence
September 1st 2005Factors such as body mass index, smoking, and the use of hormone replacement therapy affect whether women will develop various forms of incontinence in later life, according to results of a longitudinal study from Germany presented here yesterday.
TOT may manage urgency better than TVT in patients with stress incontinence
August 31st 2005Procedures using tension-free vaginal tape (TVT, Gynecare/Ethicon, Somerville, NJ) or trans-obturator tape (TOT, Mentor Corp., Santa Barbara, CA) appear to equally treat the incontinence associated with stress urinary incontinence. TOT, however, may leave patients more comfortable because it is associated with a lower risk of urgency symptoms, Italian researchers say.
Technology and increased skill advance laparoscopy
August 15th 2005San Antonio--Application of laparoscopic surgical techniques continues to expand in urology. As experience with laparoscopy grows, the efficiency and results improve. Several noteworthy presentations related to laparoscopic surgery at the 2005 AUA meeting caught the attention of Stephen Y. Nakada, MD, chairman of urology at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.
Quinolone-resistant E coli strain a major threat
August 15th 2005One by one, drug-resistant microbes have weakened or destroyed the efficacy of established antimicrobials. The appearance of a strain of urinary tract infection-associated Escherichia coli that is resistant to ciprofloxacin (Cipro, Proquin) is not necessarily a surprise, but it is a significant concern, according to Anthony J. Schaeffer, MD, chairman of the department of urology, Northwestern School of Medicine, Chicago.
Spermatogenesis cycle shorter than previously thought
August 15th 2005Advances in the field of male infertility continue to provide insight into the factors and processes that make fertility possible. Ultimately, the advances lead to techniques that extend the possibility of fertility to an ever-increasing population of patients.
Acupuncture appears to improve overactive bladder
July 21st 2005Women receiving four weekly bladder-specific acupuncture treatments experienced significant improvements in bladder capacity, urgency, frequency, and quality of life compared with women receiving placebo treatments in a study appearing in Obstetrics & Gynecology (2005; 106:138-43).
Endoscopic Tx of VUR shows cure rates above 90%
June 1st 2005Atlanta--Children treated with endoscopic intervention for vesicoureteral reflux continue to demonstrate cures that approach those of open surgery and have a high resolution rate after initial failure. In addition, incidence of febrile and non-febrile urinary tract infection after treatment is lower than after surgery, according to data presented here at the State-of-the-Art Symposium on Pediatric UTI, Reflux, Antibiotic Resistance, and Endoscopy.
Hereditary form of RCC is best treated aggresively
June 1st 2005San Antonio--A relatively new inherited syndrome known as hereditary leiomyomatosis and renal cell cancer (HLRCC) has a more aggressive clinical course than other hereditary renal cancer syndromes, and expectant management of even small HLRCC tumors is not recommended, according to a study presented at the AUA annual meeting here.
Mid-term results of newer cooled TUMT device called 'encouraging'
May 26th 2005Midpoint results of a 5-year multi-center IDE study comparing a new cooled transurethral microwave thermotherapy device against the conventional 60-minute Targis treatment (both from Urologix, Minneapolis) were announced here on Wednesday, and the data appear promising.
Microsurgical varicocelectomy preferred over conservative treatment
May 25th 2005Men who experience painful recurrent varicoceles after undergoing conservative treatment and failed surgical repair are best served by microsurgical varicocelectomy, according to Canadian researchers.Of 11 men who had failed standard varicocelectomy and experienced pain before and after surgery, 10 experienced a favorable response following microsurgical repair, according to investigators."In my mind, microsurgical varicocelectomy is the gold standard, and non-microsurgical repair is sub-standard," said lead author Armand Zini, MD, associate professor of urology at McGill University, Montreal. "However, few urologists are able to perform this procedure, since they have not been trained properly."
Two EPS cytokines may guide chronic prostatitis treatment
May 22nd 2005Measurement of two cytokines in expressed prostatic secretions (EPS) might provide diagnostic guidance for patients with chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome (CPPS), according to a study presented at the AUA annual meeting.
Study raises questions about link between IC, CPPS
May 15th 2005Kingston, Ontario--An interstitial cystitis (IC) drug has shown modest benefit in men with chronic pelvic pain syndrome (CPPS). Although the study doesn't open new therapeutic doors, it does raise interesting questions about how similar IC and CPPS may be or whether some men are being misdiagnosed.
Immunotherapies move closer to clinical application
May 15th 2005Urologists treating patients with advanced prostate cancer should anticipate a number of advances this year and next. They will also need to anticipate some of the challenges these advances will create, according to Paul F. Schellhammer, MD, program director of the Virginia Prostate Center and professor of urology at Eastern Virginia Medical School, Norfolk.
Advances in andrology moving quickly into practice
May 15th 2005It often takes years before medical advances make their way from the laboratory bench to the physician's office. Such is not the case in andrology. In many instances, the cutting edge will be of clinical relevance very soon for urologists who treat male infertility, according to Craig S. Niederberger, chief of andrology at the University of Illinois, Chicago.