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This study is being done to compare frequency of urination during the night when women take tolterodine tablets vs. when they take placebo tablets.
We will also measure whether between these two treatment conditions there are any differences in women's sleep, mood and performance on cognitive tests.
Full description
From midlife onwards, about half of women complain of poor sleep quality. One possible reason might be an increased frequency of need to urinate during the night. Women feel more frequent urges to urinate when structures that support the bladder become more lax. Tolterodine is a drug that can raise the threshold for volume of urine that accumulates in the bladder before the urge to urinate arises.
Many factors determine how people say they sleep, such as their sleep as recorded by sleep-measuring instruments, how closely they notice their night's sleep, whether they are generally prone to make positive or negative judgments or to have a lot or a few body symptoms.
In this study, women between ages 45 to 65 who are past the menopause and who are frequently bothered by the need to urinate during the night will take either tolterodine or placebo tablets for 8 weeks. During the last week they will record the hours they slept and the quality of their sleep each morning. They will wear a device on their wrist through the week that continuously records whether they are asleep or awake. During three nights of the week they will record the volume of urine whenever they urinate. At the end of the week they will complete questionnaires about their mood and take some computerized tests that measure their alertness. Thereafter they will repeat these procedures, taking the kind of tablets they did not take during the first 8-week treatment period.
We will compare the frequency of urination, sleep, mood as adjusted for the tendency to make positive or negative judgments and daytime attention level to find if any of these differ between the two treatment periods, and to explain differences between any differences that may be found.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Use of anti-cholinergic, hypnotic or sedating drugs
Presence of urinary retention, gastric retention, chronic severe constipation,or narrow-angled glaucoma.
A urinary tract infection within a month of study start.
Undiagnosed abnormal vaginal bleeding.
Benign or malignant liver disease.
History or presence of chronic alcoholism or medication addiction within the past 5 yrs.
An acute systemic infection within seven days before the study start.
Concurrent participation in another clinical trial and/or receiving an experimental medication/device in the last 30 days before admission to the study.
History of shift work within the past 6 months.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
19 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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