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KMID : 0614720110540060637
Journal of Korean Medical Association
2011 Volume.54 No. 6 p.637 ~ p.645
Drug treatment for lower urinary tract symptoms
Han Ji-Yeon

Choo Myung-Soo
Abstract
Lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) are classified into three groups: storage, voiding, and post-micturition symptoms. The most popular causes of LUTS are benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) and overactive bladder (OAB). Although BPH is a pathologic term, clinically, we use this when patients have LUTS due to benign prostatic enlargement and obstruction. OAB is defined as urgency, with or without urge incontinence, usually with frequency and nocturia. Currently ¥á1-adrenoceptor antagonists are the most common drug treatment for BPH, and are thought to act by relaxing the prostatic smooth muscle. They are all effective for the treatment of LUTS/BPH. 5¥á-reductase inhibitors, such as fiansteride and dutasteride, are another treatment option for BPH symptoms, which reduce the prostatic volume by inducing epithelial atrophy. Long-term combination therapy with alpha-1-blockers and 5¥á-reductase inhibitors reduces the risk of the overall clinical progression of BPH significantly more than does treatment with either drug alone. Antimuscarinics are the mainstay for the treatment of OAB. Antimuscarinics competitively block muscarinic receptors of all subtypes but with variations in selectivity for the different subtypes. When they are used for the treatment of OAB, they are active during the storage phase of the bladder, with little or no effect on voiding contractions. Desmopressin acetate is a synthetic analogue of Arginin vasopressin, which has been proven effective for the treatment of nocturnal polyuria in LUTS.
KEYWORD
Benign prostatic hyperplasia, Drug treatment, Overactive bladder
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