Gerald L. Andriole

ORCID: 0000-0003-4033-2352 · 7 papers in corpus · active 2013-2020

Study types

  • article 7

Condition tags

  • chronic_pelvic_pain 7
article 2020
·doi:10.1097/ju.0000000000001482

PURPOSE: We sought to determine whether pollen triggers urological chronic pelvic pain syndrome flares. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We assessed flare status every 2 weeks for 1 year as part of the Multidisciplinary Approach to the Study of Chron…

article 2020
·doi:10.1002/nau.24381

BACKGROUND: To investigate whether meteorological factors (temperature, barometric pressure, relative humidity, ultraviolet index [UVI], and seasons) trigger flares in male and female urologic chronic pelvic pain patients. METHODS: We asses…

article 2019
article 2019
·doi:10.1111/bju.14783

OBJECTIVE: To describe the frequency, intensity and duration of urological chronic pelvic pain syndrome symptom exacerbations ('flares'), as well as risk factors for these features, in the Multidisciplinary Approach to the Study of Chronic …

article 2019
·doi:10.1002/nau.24150

OBJECTIVE: To investigate changes in whole body pain during urologic chronic pelvic pain syndrome (UCPPS) flares. MATERIALS AND METHODS: UCPPS participants at one site of the multidisciplinary approach to the study of chronic pelvic pain re…

article 2018
·doi:10.1016/j.juro.2018.02.1259

shift artifacts in the measurements of bladder wall thickness (BWT), CNR and T1 from 20 pixels. RESULTS: Subjects did not complain of any pain or discomfort from 50mL NCM instillation, beyond that caused by the catheterization process. Four…

article 2013
·doi:10.1016/j.juro.2013.12.031

PURPOSE: We characterized urological symptoms in a subset of patients with urological chronic pelvic pain syndrome who have a high somatic symptom burden and a wide symptom distribution fitting a polysymptomatic, polysyndromic presentation …