Targeted Pelvic Floor Muscle Training For Urinary Incontinence After Radical Prostatectomy: A Randomised Controlled Trial With Embedded Physiological Studies
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$966,377.00
Summary
Prostatectomy is a common treatment for the most common cancer in men. Survival is good, but many develop debilitating urinary incontinence. Past pelvic floor muscle training has had limited effect, but recent work has changed understanding of how muscles control continence and compensate for surgery. This clinical trial compares innovative training individually tailored to optimise continence, usual exercise and no treatment, and aims to identify men most likely to benefit from treatment.
I am an academic endocrinologist and clinician. I lead a large research program that investigates the links between hormones and diseases of ageing in women. Thus my research program addresses the contribution of changes in adrenal and ovarian steroids in
Translational Public Health Research Addressing Complex Questions In Maternal, Perinatal And Indigenous Health
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$420,872.00
Summary
The health of women during pregnancy and the first year after giving birth is critical to the health and well-being of children. This research aims to improve understanding of the causes and consequences of poor maternal health and contribute to better informed policy and practice in maternity, early postnatal and primary care services. It focuses on 3 major themes: improving women’s health after childbirth; maternity and early postnatal care; and Indigenous women’s and children’s health.
Maternal Health Study (phase 2): Longitudinal 4-year Follow-up Of A Prospective Nulliparous Pregnancy Cohort
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$660,402.00
Summary
The burden of disease among women after childbirth is substantial, under-recognised by health professionals, and symptoms do not necessarily resolve within the first 12 months. Common health problems after childbirth include: chronic exhaustion, back pain, urinary and faecal incontinence, perineal pain, sexual health issues and intimate partner violence. This study will extend follow-up of over 1500 women taking part in a longitudinal study investigating the physical and psychological health of ....The burden of disease among women after childbirth is substantial, under-recognised by health professionals, and symptoms do not necessarily resolve within the first 12 months. Common health problems after childbirth include: chronic exhaustion, back pain, urinary and faecal incontinence, perineal pain, sexual health issues and intimate partner violence. This study will extend follow-up of over 1500 women taking part in a longitudinal study investigating the physical and psychological health of women during pregnancy and the first 18 months after the birth of their first child. In phase 2 of the study, women will be followed up 6 and 12 months after second and subsequent births, and 4 years after the birth of their first child. A major aim of phase 2 of the study is to assess the prevalence, incidence, onset, severity, duration, recurrence and chronicity of maternal health problems (including urinary and faecal incontinence, perineal pain, sexual health issues, depression and intimate partner violence) after second and subsequent births, and 4 years after giving birth to a first child. The study will also determine the extent to which the method of birth in the first birth influences longer-term maternal health outcomes including urinary and faecal incontinence, and investigate the implications of chronic and recurring physical health problems for women's psychological health and well-being. Information on the incidence and natural history of maternal health problems after caesarean and operative vaginal births will make a major international contribution to more informed debate among clinicians, and to informing women, about the risks and benefits of increasing caesarean births. The study findings will be used to inform clinical midwifery, obstetric and primary care practice, and assist in the design of new early intervention and primary care strategies for supporting women in the early years of parenting.Read moreRead less
A Randomised Controlled Trial Of A Code Game Alarm Compared With A Standard Alarm For Treating Nocturnal Enuresis
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$349,740.00
Summary
Bedwetting affects 10% of school-aged children. It has psychosocial and cognitive effects on sufferers which is reversible with appropriate treatment. First line treatment for bedwetting is alarm therapy. 1-3 fail alarm treatment becaues of not waking to alarm noise. A novel alarm which enhances wakening has been developed and predicts to be 80-95% effective. This study compares the novel alarm to a standard alarm for treating bedwetting.This simple devise can be used in the home setting.
Sensory Mechanisms In Normal Bladder And In Cystitis
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$408,861.00
Summary
The function of the lower urinary tract is to store urine and release it at appropriate times. This requires neural circuits in the brain, spinal cord and peripheral ganglia. When the bladder fills, sensory neurones fire and activate these neural circuits to store urine or to empty the bladder. If sensory neurones are too easily excited (a process called sensitisation ) this will lead to clinical disorders, including the common painful bladder syndromes, whose cause is not known (interstitial cy ....The function of the lower urinary tract is to store urine and release it at appropriate times. This requires neural circuits in the brain, spinal cord and peripheral ganglia. When the bladder fills, sensory neurones fire and activate these neural circuits to store urine or to empty the bladder. If sensory neurones are too easily excited (a process called sensitisation ) this will lead to clinical disorders, including the common painful bladder syndromes, whose cause is not known (interstitial cystitis, sensory urgency etc). These are characterised by pelvic pain, urinary urgency, frequency and, in some cases, urge incontinence (loss of urine for no apparent reason) which results from unstable or overactive bladder. Despite a large database of knowledge about the sensory innervation of the bladder, many important gaps still exist. These gaps have restricted the development of new therapies. For example, we have little idea about exactly which functional classes of sensory neurones signal filling of the normal bladder or what different types of information they carry. This is vital information for understanding which neurones are affected in disease states and whether they are all affected in the same way. We have developed new methods that will allow us to identify the major classes of sensory neurones that innervate the bladder, what they respond to and how they are activated. We will also determine whether some classes are preferentially sensitised by inflammation and the most important mechanisms that are likely to underlie this. The significance of this project is that it provides the basic scientific understanding of sensory innervation of the bladder and will identify potential targets for selective pharmacological intervention in common bladder disorders.Read moreRead less