A Behavioral Weight Loss Program and Nonurinary Incontinence Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms in Overweight and Obese Women with Urinary Incontinence: A Secondary Data Analysis of PRIDE
Autor: | Breyer, Benjamin N, Creasman, Jennifer M, Richter, Holly E, Myers, Deborah, Burgio, Kathryn L, Wing, Rena R, West, Delia Smith, Kusek, John W, Subak, Leslee L, PRIDE |
---|---|
Rok vydání: | 2018 |
Předmět: |
Urologic Diseases
Adult Data Analysis obesity Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities Clinical Sciences Renal and urogenital Oral and gastrointestinal Patient Education as Topic Clinical Research Behavior Therapy Behavioral and Social Science Weight Loss urination disorders Prevalence Humans lower urinary tract symptoms Exercise Metabolic and endocrine Nutrition PRIDE Prevention Middle Aged Overweight Urology & Nephrology Weight Reduction Programs Urinary Incontinence Treatment Outcome female |
Zdroj: | The Journal of urology, vol 199, iss 1 |
Popis: | PurposeWe sought to determine whether a behavioral weight reduction intervention would improve nonurinary incontinence lower urinary tract storage symptoms at 6 months, including urinary frequency, nocturia and urgency, compared to a structured education program serving as the control group among overweight and obese women with urinary incontinence.Materials and methodsPRIDE (Program to Reduce Incontinence by Diet and Exercise) was a randomized clinical trial performed in 338 overweight or obese women with urinary incontinence. Participants were randomized, including 226 to 6-month behavioral weight loss intervention and 112 to the control group. All participants received a self-help behavioral treatment booklet to improve bladder control. On this secondary data analysis we examined changes in nonurinary incontinence lower urinary tract storage symptoms from baseline to 6 months and the impact of treatment allocation (intervention vs control), weight loss and physical activity.ResultsNonurinary incontinence lower urinary tract storage symptoms were common at baseline, varying from 48% to 62%. In the 2 groups combined women experienced significant improvement in nocturia, urgency and International Prostate Symptom Score at 6 months (all p |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |