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      Urinary Oxidative Stress Biomarkers in the Diagnosis of Detrusor Overactivity in Female Patients with Stress Urinary Incontinence

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      Biomedicines
      MDPI AG

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          Abstract

          Ninety-three women with urodynamic stress incontinence (USI) and a mean age of 60.8 ± 10.7 (36–83) years were retrospectively enrolled. According to their VUDS, 31 (33%) were grouped into USI and detrusor overactivity (DO), 28 (30.1%) were grouped into USI and hypersensitive bladder (HSB), and 34 (36.6%) were controls (USI and stable bladder). The USI and DO group had significantly increased 8-isoprostane (mean, 33.3 vs. 10.8 pg/mL) and 8-hydroxy-2-deoxyguanosine (8-OHdG; mean, 28.9 vs. 17.4 ng/mL) and decreased interleukin (IL)-2 (mean, 0.433 vs. 0.638 pg/mL), vascular endothelial growth factor (mean, 5.51 vs. 8.99 pg/mL), and nerve growth factor (mean, 0.175 vs. 0.235 pg/mL) levels compared to controls. Oxidative stress biomarkers were moderately diagnostic of DO from controls, especially 8-isoprostane (area under the curve (AUC) > 0.7). Voided volume was highly diagnostic of DO from either controls or non-DO patients (AUC 0.750 and 0.915, respectively). The proposed prediction model with voided volume, 8-OHdG, and 8-isoprostane (cutoff values 384 mL, 35 ng/mL, and 37 pg/mL, respectively) had an accuracy of 81.7% (sensitivity, 67.7%; specificity, 88.7%; positive predictive value, 75.0%; negative predictive value, 84.6%). Combined with voided volume, urinary oxidative stress biomarkers have the potential to be used to identify urodynamic DO in patients with USI.

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          The International Continence Society (ICS) report on the terminology for adult male lower urinary tract and pelvic floor symptoms and dysfunction

          In the development of terminology of the lower urinary tract, due to its increasing complexity, the terminology for male lower urinary tract and pelvic floor symptoms and dysfunction needs to be updated using a male-specific approach and via a clinically-based consensus report.
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            International Continence Society Good Urodynamic Practices and Terms 2016: Urodynamics, uroflowmetry, cystometry, and pressure-flow study

            The working group initiated by the ICS Standardisation Steering Committee has updated the International Continence Society Standard "Good Urodynamic Practice" published in 2002.
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              Urinary biomarkers of oxidative status.

              Oxidative damage produced by reactive oxygen species (ROS) has been implicated in the etiology and pathology of many health conditions, including a large number of chronic diseases. Urinary biomarkers of oxidative status present a great opportunity to study redox balance in human populations. With urinary biomarkers, specimen collection is non-invasive and the organic/metal content is low, which minimizes the artifactual formation of oxidative damage to molecules in specimens. Also, urinary levels of the biomarkers present intergraded indices of redox balance over a longer period of time compared to blood levels. This review summarizes the criteria for evaluation of biomarkers applicable to epidemiological studies and evaluation of several classes of biomarkers that are formed non-enzymatically: oxidative damage to lipids, proteins, DNA, and allantoin, an oxidative product of uric acid. The review considers formation, metabolism, and exertion of each biomarker, available data on validation in animal and clinical models of oxidative stress, analytical approaches, and their intra- and inter-individual variation. The recommended biomarkers for monitoring oxidative status over time are F₂-isoprostanes and 8-oxodG. For inter-individual comparisons, F₂-isoprostanes are recommended, whereas urinary 8-oxodG levels may be confounded by differences in the DNA repair capacity. Promising urinary biomarkers include allantoin, acrolein-lysine, and dityrosine. Copyright © 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
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                Journal
                BIOMID
                Biomedicines
                Biomedicines
                MDPI AG
                2227-9059
                February 2023
                January 26 2023
                : 11
                : 2
                : 357
                Article
                10.3390/biomedicines11020357
                36830894
                91e8088c-88c2-4509-b71e-1162a9d60e4f
                © 2023

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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