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Evidence that percutaneous tibial nerve stimulation is an effective, drug-free treatment for overactive bladder is mounting. A double-blind, sham-controlled, multicenter trial showed a response rate of about 50% in patients who have struggled with symptoms for a decade.

The following pages feature products and services from manufacturers that are exhibiting at the American Urological Association annual meeting in San Francisco. Exhibit hall booth numbers have been included so that you can search for product demonstrations and exhibits that are of particular interest to you.

Surgeons who automatically consider radical nephrectomy for small renal tumors are doing their patients a disservice. Data from Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center and other centers suggest that partial nephrectomy is more appropriate, especially for smaller tumors.

A major cause of concern among urologists and other physicians with large Medicare patient practices is a provision in the new law that will establish a new Independent Payment Advisory Board that is charged with reducing the per capita rate of growth in Medicare spending indefinitely.

The American Association of Clinical Urologists has always been the political voice for organized urology and believes that urologists themselves must speak to elected officials directly.

Blue Shield of California now covers the Renessa System (Novasys Medical, Inc., Newark, CA) treatment for non-pregnant women diagnosed with moderate to severe stress urinary incontinence who are unable or unwilling to undergo surgery.

Cancer often leads to significant and long-term disruption in sexual function and intimacy, regardless of the type of cancer or how far along the patient is in the treatment plan, say researchers from Duke Clinical Research Institute, Durham, NC.

The American Board of Medical Specialties, which oversees the certification of physician specialists in the United States, has appointed Gerald H. Jordan, MD, to its board.

Although the mandatory compliance date for implementation is October 1, 2013, you'll need to accomplish much between now and then to make documentation and diagnosis reporting as seamless as possible.

It is known that penile implants coated or impregnated with antibiotics produce lower short-term, post-surgical infection rates than implants not treated with antibiotics, but researchers from several institutions are now reporting lower infection rates over the long term, as well.