Antidepressant drug tested in treatment of bladder disease

Main Category: Urology / Nephrology
Article Date: 03 Mar 2005 - 7:00 PDT

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'Antidepressant drug tested in treatment of bladder disease'

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Queen's selected as only Canadian site in U.S. NIH-sponsored study -

(Kingston, ON) - Queen's University has been selected as the only Canadian site to test a new antidepressant drug approved by the FDA (U.S. Food and Drug Administration) for its potential to alleviate pain in two common bladder conditions that have no known cause and no effective therapy.

Funded by the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH), the research will be carried out at 10 medical centres in the United States and Canada. Dr. Curtis Nickel, professor of Urology at Queen's and urologist at Kingston General Hospital, heads the Canadian study.

The researchers are recruiting adults newly diagnosed with either painful bladder syndrome (PBS) or interstitial cystitis (IC), to learn if the oral drug amitriptyline will reduce the pain and frequent urination associated with these conditions. An estimated 10 million people worldwide suffer from PBS and IC.

Although amitriptyline is primarily used for depression, the way it works makes it useful for treating the pain of fibromyalgia, multiple sclerosis, and other chronic pain syndromes, Dr. Nickel explains. "Prior small studies have suggested the drug may be a wise choice for this syndrome as well, because it blocks nerve signals that trigger pain and may also decrease muscle spasms in the bladder, helping to cut both pain and frequent urination."

The researchers believe that 25 to 75 milligrams of amitriptyline a day may begin relieving IC pain within a week. In contrast, doses in the range of 150 to 300 milligrams are generally used to treat depression.

The 10 centres where testing will take place make up the Interstitial Cystitis Clinical Research Network, sponsored by the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) at the NIH, which coordinates all government health care research in the United States.

In 2003, Dr. Nickel and his Kingston Genito-urinary Research Group were awarded an unprecedented four research grants from the NIH, totaling almost $8 million. These studies are now examining alternative, complementary and novel therapies for prostate and bladder disease, in both laboratory research and clinical trials involving more than 3,000 men and women throughout southern Ontario.

Contacts:

Nancy Dorrance, Queen's News & Media Services, 613.533.2869
Therese Greenwood, Queen's News & Media Services, 613.533.6907
Attention broadcasters: Queen's now has facilities to provide broadcast quality audio and video feeds. For television interviews, we can provide a live, real-time double ender from Kingston fibre optic cable. Please call for details.

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
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Visitor Opinions (latest shown first)

Candidas & Demyelation

posted by Lora on 1 Aug 2009 at 6:57 pm

This report has been out there since 1995!!! They describe how Candida went through the Blood Brain Barrier and started attacking grey matter as well as the demylenation process. Why is this kind of research so obscure? Why haven't I as a Multiple Sclerosis patient not provided this kind of information by my Neurologist? Why is it that the first I've known of this is today 08/01/2009!!! I'm always told they don't know what causes MS or how to heal it. Well, it seems to me, the patient, after reading this research that the first thing I need to do is look into Candidas and see if I can treat that effectively. If I'd treated the Candidas 13 years ago I might have saved myself a lot of grief and money!!

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Myositis

posted by Lora on 1 Aug 2009 at 6:15 pm

Teri,
My sister had Rheumatoid Arthritis and was given a drug for her RA that compromised her immune system and ultimately led to her death when she couldn’t fight off an infection in her stitches after an emergency appendectomy. She literally boiled to death in her ICU bed even after 3 transfusions of blood! But enough of that, what I wanted to say was prior to that they had her on Two 50 mg tab of Amitriptyline for sleep which helped her tremendously as sleep was hard for her to get.

Rheumatoid Arthritis is an inflammatory disease as is Multiple Sclerosis, which I have. In looking up Inclusion Body Myositis I see that it is also an inflammatory disease . I’d like to suggest you do a little internet search using “Inclusion Body Myositis “ + “Candida albicans” and see where it takes you.

I don’t want to make this post long, but Candida is possibly the root cause of most inflammatory diseases. I say this from a lay person’s point of view and based only on personal experience and extensive reading on Candida albican and it’s relation to Multiple Sclerosis, inflammatory and auto-immune diseases.

To quote Roger McDougal, that 'I AM A BIOLOGICAL PROCESS GONE WRONG' who supposedly cured himself of MS by treating his Candida overgrowth. Or Ann Boroch who also claims to have cured her MS by treating her Candida overgrowth along with diet and supplements. It’s only my personal musing to say this, but I keep finding similarities between all these diseases and Candida overgrowth so I wonder if there isn’t a big similarity, like they all start with Candida and it depends on what route the Candida takes in the body and just where it lands and starts attacking, starting an inflammatory process, before manifests itself as one of the many auto-immune diseases.

I could be all wet, but those of you with inflammatory diseases, look into this and tell me what you think. Because I too believe I’m a Biological process gone wrong!

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Myositis

posted by Teri on 29 Jul 2009 at 11:32 pm

I have a condition called Inclusion body myositis and until reading your article was puzzling why my muscles felt better than what they did up to two years ago. I take amytrip for a chronic follicular bladder, my belief is that it is also helping me with my myositis, which is a progressive muscle wasting disease.This is a bonus as their is no cure for IBM

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Amitriptlyn/inerstitial cystitis

posted by Carole Javaux on 5 Mar 2005 at 6:07 pm

I have been taking amitrypitlyn for five years for bladder pain and urgency caused by IC. I started with 4 ten mg. tablets, and now take 2 ten mg. tablets a day, along with Detrol or Detrol LA. When they symptoms first occurred, I took URISPAZ, but only needed that for four months. Two months ago, with no bladder problems for five years, I cut down on the amitrip. a lot. All they symptoms came back, a real flare up! I took URISPAZ for two months, along with six or so ten mg. tablets of amitrip. and the Detrol LA. Now, I am off the URISPAZ and take f4 tn mg. of amitrip. and the Detrol. I will never, ever stop taking the amitriptylin again, it works, believe me! We have used it in the US for this for about 20 years

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