Publications by authors named "Jose Rosa Arias"

Aim: To evaluate the impact of Vesomni/Urizia/Volutsa, a fixed-dose combination tablet containing 6 mg solifenacin (antimuscarinic) and 0.4 mg tamsulosin (α-blocker), on health-related quality of life (HRQoL) and treatment satisfaction in men with lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) associated with benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) in routine clinical practice.

Methods: EUROPA was a noninterventional study of men with LUTS/BPH not responding to monotherapy who were prescribed Vesomni in routine clinical practice.

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Objective: Observational studies can provide evidence about patient outcomes in routine clinical practice. This prospective, non-interventional study (BELIEVE) is the largest real-world European study to date to assess quality-of-life, treatment satisfaction, resource utilization, and persistence in patients with overactive bladder (OAB) who were prescribed mirabegron as part of routine clinical practice.

Methods: The primary objective was to evaluate change from baseline in quality-of-life based on overactive bladder questionnaire (OAB-q) sub-scales.

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We present a new case of penile metastatic disease. The original tumour has been situated in the esophagus, which is a rare clinical situation. But what becomes exceptional in our clinical case is that the penile metastasis was the first disease symptom, since until this moment the original tumour has been silent.

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Objective: Benign testicular proliferative processes are known by the name of pseudotumors, because currently they are not considered real neoplasias. The paratesticular fibrous pseudotumor (PFP) is a rare entity the definition and etiopathogenesis of which is under great confusion. It is a process that misleads the clinical because they simulate neoplasias.

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Objective: Usual complications of retropubic adenomectomy are well-known. Despite their low incidence, urologists face them relatively often in their daily practice due to the frequent performance of this technique, and they usually have satisfactory outcomes. We want to attract attention to the presence of a thigh abscess as an exceptional complication of adenomectomy.

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