C
Cathie Spino
Researcher at University of Michigan
Publications - 67
Citations - 1896
Cathie Spino is an academic researcher from University of Michigan. The author has contributed to research in topics: Urinary incontinence & Clinical trial. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 67 publications receiving 1511 citations. Previous affiliations of Cathie Spino include Harvard University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Defining success after surgery for pelvic organ prolapse.
Matthew D. Barber,Linda Brubaker,Ingrid Nygaard,Thomas L. Wheeler,Joseph I. Schaffer,Zhen Chen,Cathie Spino +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe pelvic organ prolapse surgical success rates using a variety of definitions with differing requirements for anatomic, symptomatic, or re-treatment outcomes, and evaluate them in participants who underwent abdominal sacrocolpo surgery.
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Differences between women and men in adverse events and CD4+ responses to nucleoside analogue therapy for HIV infection
Judith S. Currier,Cathie Spino,Janet M. Grimes,Constance B. Wofsy,David Katzenstein,Michael Hughes,Scott M. Hammer,Deborah J. Cotton +7 more
TL;DR: The suggestion of a gender difference in response to ZDV monotherapy by antiretroviral‐naive study subjects and the lower baseline values for HIV RNA in women compared with those in men provides evidence for gender differences in the relationship between virus replication, CD4+ decline, and responses to nucleoside analogue therapy.
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The questionnaire for urinary incontinence diagnosis (QUID): Validity and responsiveness to change in women undergoing non-surgical therapies for treatment of stress predominant urinary incontinence†‡§
Catherine S. Bradley,David D. Rahn,Ingrid Nygaard,Matthew D. Barber,Charles W. Nager,Kimberly Kenton,Nazema Y. Siddiqui,Robert Abel,Cathie Spino,Holly E. Richter +9 more
TL;DR: The Questionnaire for Urinary Incontinence Diagnosis (QUID), a 6‐item urinary incontinence symptom questionnaire, was developed and validated to distinguish stress and urge UI.
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Adherence to Behavioral Interventions for Stress Incontinence: Rates, Barriers, and Predictors
Diane Borello-France,Kathryn L. Burgio,Patricia S. Goode,Wen Ye,Alison C. Weidner,Emily S. Lukacz,John Eric Jelovsek,Catherine S. Bradley,Joseph I. Schaffer,Yvonne Hsu,Kimberly Kenton,Cathie Spino +11 more
TL;DR: Adherence to PFM exercises and bladder control strategies for SUI can be high and sustained over time, however, behavioral interventions to help women link exercise to environmental and behavioral cues may only be beneficial over the short term.
Journal ArticleDOI
Rectal indomethacin alone versus indomethacin and prophylactic pancreatic stent placement for preventing pancreatitis after ERCP: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
B. Joseph Elmunzer,Jose Serrano,Amitabh Chak,Steven A. Edmundowicz,Georgios I. Papachristou,James M. Scheiman,Vikesh K. Singh,Shyam Varadurajulu,John J. Vargo,Field F. Willingham,Todd H. Baron,Gregory A. Cote,Joseph Romagnuolo,April Wood-Williams,Emily K. Depue,Rebecca L. Spitzer,Cathie Spino,Lydia D. Foster,Valerie Durkalski +18 more
TL;DR: Whether rectal indomethacin obviates the need for pancreatic stent placement in patients undergoing high-risk ERCP is investigated to determine whether PSP remains necessary in the era of NSAIDs pharmacoprevention.