In: Main
8 May 2010Anticholinergic ADEs are common with trospium (Table 4). More than half of the patients in the clinical trials experienced one or more ADEs. The most commonly reported ADEs were dry mouth, constipation, abdominal pain (upper), constipation (aggravated), headache, and fatigue.
Trospium chloride is a quaternary amine that antagonizes the effect of acetylcholine on muscarinic receptors in cholinergically innervated organs. It exhibits parasympatholytic action by reducing the detrusor tone of smooth muscle in the bladder as well as uncontrolled detrusor contractions that can cause OAB with incontinence.
Less than 10% of the trospium dose is absorbed following oral administration; peak plasma concentrations (Cmax) are achieved five to six hours after a single dose. Exposure causes a decrease in the Cmax and an area-under-the-curve (AUC) concentration of up to 59% and 33%, respectively, for evening doses and morning doses. Because high-fat meals decrease [...]
In: Main
5 May 2010INTRODUCTION
Overactive bladder (OAB) is a symptom syndrome that refers to the layered, smooth muscle that surrounds the bladder, the detrusor muscle. This muscle contracts spastically, sometimes without a known cause, resulting in sustained, high bladder pressure and the urgent need to urinate. People with OAB often experience urgency at inconvenient and unpredictable times. This urgency [...]
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