Combination therapy appears more effective than single drug for lower urinary tract symptoms
14th Nov 2006, 19:23 GMT
Men with overactive bladder and lower urinary tract symptoms who received a combination therapy were more likely to report improvement in symptoms than men who received only one medication, according to a study in the Nov. 15 issue of JAMA, a theme issue on men's health.
Combination therapy appears more effective than single drug for lower urinary tract symptoms related news:
- Combination Therapy More Effective for Overactive Bladder — RedOrbit News - Health
- Health Tip: Signs That You Have Kidney Stones — KLTV - Med Team
- SSRI Plus Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Effective for Pathological Gambling — Medscape Psychiatry Headlines
- Volume 194, number 12: Treatment Benefit on Cerebrospinal Fluid HIV-1 Levels in the Setting of Systemic Virological Suppression and Failure — J Infect Dis Latest Issue
- WelChol and Ezetimibe Combination Therapy Provides Significant LDL-C Reductions — Cardiology News from StratCenter.com
- A mother's mission: Fighting diabetes — PittsburghLIVE.com
- Testosterone replacement therapy appears safe for prostate — EurekAlert! - Medicine and Health
- Isis Cholesterol Drug Shown Effective — Pharmaceuticals News from StratCenter.com
- Psychiatric warning put on flu drug — SacBee -- News
- Daiichi Sankyo, Inc.: WelChol and Ezetimibe Combination Therapy Provides Significant LDL-C Reductions — Market Wire - Pharmaceuticals and Biotech
Latest news from EurekAlert! - Medicine and Health:
- Enbrel provides sustained clinical improvements for ankylosing spondylitis for up to 3 years
- Enbrel first biologic with up to 9 years rheumatoid arthritis safety, sustained efficacy data
- UCSD computer scientist wins Young Investigator Award, research on snake venom proteins highlighted
- Why do insects like to eat some plants more than others?
- Opposites do not attract
- Wild gorillas carriers of an SIV virus close to the AIDS virus
- New data show ACTOS (pioglitazone HCl) halted progression of atherosclerosis as indicated by CIMT
- Pourquié lab identifies genes involved in formation of vertebral precursors
- Artificial cornea offers better results for infants, some blind patients
- Healthier kids just the click of a remote away