What is urinary incontinence?
Urinary incontinence is loss of bladder control. When the bladder is functioning normally, it does not empty without your awareness and control.
Urinary incontinence becomes more common as people get older. It is a problem for as many as 1 in 3 Americans age 60 or older. The condition is at least twice as common among women as men.
How does it occur?
There are several different types of incontinence: stress, urge, overactive, and functional.
Stress Incontinence is the most common kind of urinary incontinence in women. It causes urine to leak during lifting, exercise, coughing, sneezing, or laughing. Stress incontinence is caused by relaxed pelvic muscles that may have been stretched or torn during child-bearing.
Urge incontinence is an inability to hold the urine once the urge to urinate occurs. It becomes hard to get to the bathroom in time.
Incontinence may be caused or made worse by problems such as:
Overactive bladder is when the bladder begins to contract or spasm without being completely full. Sometimes you can actually empty your bladder completely without any control or leak urine without being aware of it.
Functional incontinence occurs when a person is unable to reach the bathroom in time to urinate because of problems such as Alzheimer's disease or severe arthritis.
What are the symptoms?
Symptoms include:
How is it diagnosed?
Your medical history is very important and you will have a pelvic exam. Urine samples will be sent to the laboratory to look for infection or other problems. A pelvic ultrasound may be done to evaluate the uterus and possible fibroids that could increase your symptoms. An Urodynamic Test will be performed to evaluate the bladder and how it behaves when filling and emptying.
How is it treated?
Treatment depends on the type of incontinence and the cause of the problem. Treatment for urinary incontinence can include:
Can urinary incontinence be prevented?
You may not be able to prevent urinary incontinence because it is a symptom of several other problems, rather than a condition with a single cause. This is why it is important to discuss incontinence in the early stages so the incontinence can possibly be reversed with minimal therapies.
Many people may benefit from exercises known as Kegel exercises that strengthen the pelvic floor muscles. You can feel the muscles to use by squeezing the muscles in your genital area. You might find that it helps to pretend you are stopping a flow of urine or trying to stop from passing gas.
Tighten these muscles and hold the contraction for 4 seconds. Do this 10 to 20 times. Allow the muscles to relax completely between contractions.
Do these sets of contractions 10 times a day. By doing fewer repetitions than this, you will make these exercises less effective.
You can do Kegel exercises anywhere: while sitting at a desk, waiting for a bus, washing dishes, driving a car, waiting in line, or watching television. No one will know you are doing them.
Do not do these exercises while you are urinating.
You may see a change for the better after doing the Kegels for just a few weeks. However, you may not notice a lot of improvement until after 3 to 6 months of daily exercises. You should continue doing Kegels every day to keep the pelvic muscles strong.
If you have urge incontinence, bladder training can make a big difference. Instead of waiting for your bladder to signal the need to urinate (which is too late for many people), set a schedule for emptying your bladder. Use the toilet 20 to 30 minutes after each meal, at least twice between meals, and before you go to bed. You can set a timer to remind you. Adjust the schedule as you learn the frequency that best meets your needs. When you first get the urge to urinate, wait 2 minutes and then go to the restroom. After a few days, increase that timeframe to 5 minutes, 10 minutes, 15 minutes until you have trained your bladder to not give such strong urgency signals.
Drink plenty of fluids. Don't try to control urinary incontinence by cutting back on fluids. It won't help and may even be harmful to you.
How can I take care of myself?
If you have any questions or concerns, or would like to schedule an appointment, please contact either our Virginia Beach or Chesapeake office today.
Virginia Beach
3720 Holland Road
Virginia Beach, Virginia 23452
Ph. (757) 463-1234
Fx. (757) 463-0453
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Chesapeake
680-C Kingsborough Square
Chesapeake, Virginia 23320
Ph. (757) 548-0044
Fx. (757) 547-0179
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