Your Family Doctor
Add to Favorites Contact Us Set as home page Home
  

Ask The Doctor

Live Talk

Encyclopedia

Medical Articles

News
    Medical online consultation with qualified doctors
    Free Medical articles on various medical subjects
    Doctor's reliable advice
  Menu
  Sign Up/ Login
Login  
Password  
   
SignUp Forgot Password
  Ask our doctors
  Other articles
 
   ORDER CONSULTATION    
Our GP is ready to help you if you want to be sure that you are healthy and in good shape, you have medical questions or problems and want to discuss with an experienced doctor, you have some unknown symptoms and want to know what they could be related to, you want to know another medical opinion about the best way of treatment of your disease.
General practitioner: Marguerite Kelher
Man's Health
back to articles list back to category list     
Collagen shots may help men with incontinence

Injections improve short-term bladder control, researchers say

For men with urinary incontinence that often follows prostate surgery, injections of collagen into the area of the urinary sphincter can improve short-term bladder control, according to a new study.

The procedure is performed via the urinary outlet, the urethra, under local anesthesia. "Collagen is suitable in patients who do not wish a more invasive option," Dr. O. Lenaine Westney from the University of Texas Houston Health Science Center told Reuters Health.

"It is unsuitable for patients who have undergone treatments which result in tissue damage to the urethra (radiation or cryotherapy)," the investigator cautioned Westney and colleagues evaluated the effectiveness of collagen injection therapy for urinary incontinence after prostate removal for cancer or benign prostate enlargement in 322 men.

The treatment reduced the average number of pads required to keep dry from 5 to 3 daily, the team reports in The Journal of Urology, and the procedure remained effective for about 6 or 7 months.

"Transurethral collagen injections are a good option for short-term therapy in men with post-prostatectomy incontinence," the researchers conclude.

"Based on our population, if there is no improvement after two to three injections, it is reasonable to assume that injectable therapy will not be a successful treatment option for the patient," Westney commented.

More reliable treatments, which involve surgery, include an artificial urinary sphincter and placement of a "sling" to increase urine outflow resistance.

 

 
back to articles list back to category list     
Medical Articles:
Cosmetology,   Sport,   First Aid Kits,   Sexology,   Psychology,   Dermatology,   Aids & Cancer,   Contraceptives,   Healthy Food!,   Your Baby,   Woman's Health,   Alcohol & Smoking,   Drugs,   Teens Health,   Test Description,   Man's Health,   Senior Health,  

  Copyright © 2004-2005 www.online-ambulance.com