Initial evaluation of women with irritative voiding symptoms
This article has no abstract so we have provided the first paragraph of the full text.
In a recent study reported in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Sokol and colleagues set out to test the hypothesis that, because of the rarity of abnormal findings, the routine use of urinary cytology and CYSTOSCOPY is of limited value in the initial evaluation of women with irritative voiding symptoms. These tests are currently used to detect urinary tract cancers, but the authors suggested that they may not be necessary in the initial evaluation because of the low prevalence of these cancers in an unscreened population.
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