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The urologic literature suggests that there is an association between a variety of psychiatric disorders and incontinence. Most notably, depression is found in a significant percentage of patients with urinary incontinence. Depression also occurs in other conditions associated with urinary urge incontinence, such as aging and dementia, and in neurologic disorders such as normal pressure hydrocephalus. Correction of some neurologic disorders eliminates both depression and urge incontinence. Although chronic medical disorders such as urge incontinence may lead to depression, an alternative hypothesis is that these two conditions share a common neurochemical pathogenesis. Lowering monoamines such as serotonin and noradrenaline in the central nervous system (CNS) leads to depression and urinary frequency and a hyperactive bladder in experimental animals. Thus, depression may not only be the result of persistent urinary incontinence, but individuals with altered CNS monoamines could manifest both depression and an overactive bladder. The latter condition may lead to urge incontinence, urinary frequency, urgency, or enuresis. Uncovering further evidence for such a linkage could serve as the basis for the development of genetic markers and novel therapeutic interventions for these two conditions.
In this study, the investigators will evaluate the efficacy and safety of SSRI on OAB patients who does not respond to the antimuscarinic agents.
Full description
3-month, prospective, open-label, comparative trial
Primary Objectives:
Secondary Objectives
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Female aged ≥ 18 and ≤80 years
On a stable dose of an antimuscarinic agents for at least 3 months
Persistent symptoms of OAB as verified by the screening 5 day micturition diary, defined by:
A rating of the bladder condition at Baseline prior to randomization as "Some Moderate Problems", "Severe Problems", or "Many Severe Problems" on the Patient Perception of Bladder Condition (PPBC) questionnaire
Ability and willingness to correctly complete the micturition diary and questionnaire
Capable of understanding and having signed the informed consent form after full discussion of the research nature of the treatment and its risks and benefits
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
40 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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