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Research Topic : bladder irritability
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  • Funded Activity

    Role Of Sensory Neurons In Obstruction-induced Bladder Overactivity

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $340,986.00
    Summary
    About 20% of people over the age of 40 have the clinical syndrome of an “overactive bladder”, which causes symptoms of urgency, frequency and incontinence. The mechanisms causing bladder overactivity are not known. This project will identify sensory neurons, which become overexcited, and determine which mediators and ionic channels are responsible for this. Our new data will identify selective pharmacological targets for new therapies and diagnostic tools for these distressing bladder disorders.
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    Phase III Trial Of Radical Chemo-radiation Vs Radiation Alone In The Management Of Localised Bladder TCC.

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $194,875.00
    Summary
    This trial aims to see if the combination of Chemotherapy and Radiation treatment is indeed superior in eradicating the tumor and preserving the Bladder in a greater number of patients as compared to Radiation treatment alone. If the final results from this study do show chemoradiotherapy to be significantly superior to radiation alone, without an increase in morbidity ( especially long term side effects ) , this may lay the platform for a greater proportion of patients with localised bladder ca .... This trial aims to see if the combination of Chemotherapy and Radiation treatment is indeed superior in eradicating the tumor and preserving the Bladder in a greater number of patients as compared to Radiation treatment alone. If the final results from this study do show chemoradiotherapy to be significantly superior to radiation alone, without an increase in morbidity ( especially long term side effects ) , this may lay the platform for a greater proportion of patients with localised bladder cancer, being in the first instance considered for this organ( bladder) preserving approach something which has become a reality at a number of other sites of cancer with the use of multimodality treatment.
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    Non-neuronal ATP: Regulation Of Release And Action In The Bladder

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $451,553.00
    Summary
    Incontinence disorders are costly and debilitating. How the bladder signals the normal sensation of fullness as well as the urgent need to void urine (urgency) is still not fully understood. The signaling molecule ATP is released during bladder stretch. Using animal and human bladder, we will study how the bladder lining is involved in this signaling process, by measuring how bladder chemicals interact with stretch to modulate ATP release, and how ATP can influence nerve impulses to the brain.
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    Funded Activity

    Neuropeptides In Human Bladder: Relevance To Detrusor Instability

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $125,192.00
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    Funded Activity

    Mechanisms Of Metastasis In Urological Cancers

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $422,781.00
    Summary
    The spread of cancer to other organs is responsible for 90% of cancer deaths. This proposal seeks to determine how urological tumours (prostate and bladder) spread around the body. Cancer cell and animal models are an integral component of the research, and together with data obtained in human cancer specimens provide a comprehensive, powerful approach to identify key pathways involved in tumour spread. This is critical for the design of new therapies to treat and-or prevent tumour spread.
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    Funded Activity

    Sjogren's Syndrome As A Disorder Of Anti-receptor Autoimmunity

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $211,527.00
    Summary
    A new approach to understanding Sjogren's syndrome Sjogren's syndrome (SS) is a frequent cause of illness predominantly in women, leading to frequent attendances to medical, dental and allied health practitioners. Historically considered a rarity, SS, in both its primary and secondary forms, is arguably the commonest manifestation of human systemic autoimmunity. Increasingly recognised by clinicians as the unifying diagnosis underlying a plethora of chronic disabling symptoms in women from the f .... A new approach to understanding Sjogren's syndrome Sjogren's syndrome (SS) is a frequent cause of illness predominantly in women, leading to frequent attendances to medical, dental and allied health practitioners. Historically considered a rarity, SS, in both its primary and secondary forms, is arguably the commonest manifestation of human systemic autoimmunity. Increasingly recognised by clinicians as the unifying diagnosis underlying a plethora of chronic disabling symptoms in women from the fourth decade and beyond, therapeutic options remain limited due to our primitive understanding of its cause. Emerging evidence suggests that rather than a consequence of physical destruction of salivary and tear glands by cells of the immune system, severe dryness of the mouth and eyes in SS might be caused by antibodies which block the transmission of signals from tiny nerves to receptors in these glands. We also have evidence that other symptoms experienced by patients with SS, including abnormal sweating, irritable bladder and bowel, and Raynaud's phenomenon, may also be the consequence of blockage of nerve supply. Furthermore, we have detected these blocking antibodies in patients with both primary SS and rheumatoid arthritis accompanied by secondary SS, pointing for the first time to a common underlying cause for SS in these two settings. We propose a new approach to understanding Sjogren's syndrome, as a disease of anti-receptor autoimmunity, akin to Graves disease of the thyroid gland. This opens up exciting possibilities for the development of new techniques for the diagnosis and treatment of SS.
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    Funded Activity

    Uncoupled Research Fellowship

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $774,250.00
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    Funded Activity

    Nervous Control Of The Lower Urinary Tract

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $279,510.00
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    Funded Activity

    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.
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    Funded Activity

    Tumour Or Metastasis-suppressive Activity Of The Uroplakin 1b Gene In Bladder Carcinoma

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $188,322.00
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