A Randomized Trial of Urodynamic Testing before Stress-Incontinence Surgery
Author(s) -
Charles W. Nager,
Linda Brubaker,
Heather J. Litman,
Halina M. Zyczynski,
R. Edward Varner,
Cindy L. Amundsen,
Larry Sirls,
Peggy Norton,
Amy Arisco,
Toby C. Chai,
Philippe E. Zimmern,
Matthew D. Barber,
Kimberly J. Dandreo,
Shawn A. Menefee,
Kimberly Kenton,
Jerry L. Lowder,
Holly E. Richter,
Salil Khandwala,
Ingrid Nygaard,
Stephen R. Kraus,
Harry Johnson,
Gary E. Lemack,
Marina Mihova,
Michael Albo,
Elizabeth R. Mueller,
Gary Sutkin,
Tracey Wilson,
Yvonne Hsu,
Thomas A. Rozanski,
Leslie Rickey,
David D. Rahn,
Sharon L. Tennstedt,
John W. Kusek,
E. Ann Gormley
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
new england journal of medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 19.889
H-Index - 1030
eISSN - 1533-4406
pISSN - 0028-4793
DOI - 10.1056/nejmoa1113595
Subject(s) - medicine , urodynamic testing , randomized controlled trial , stress incontinence , urinary incontinence , stress testing (software) , urodynamic studies , surgery , urology , computer science , programming language
Urodynamic studies are commonly performed in women before surgery for stress urinary incontinence, but there is no good evidence that they improve outcomes.
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