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SERVICES
Incontinence
Introduction:
Loss of bladder to control urine is called urinary incontinence.
It can happen to anyone, but is very common in older people.
Many people with bladder control problems hide the problem from everyone,
even from their doctor. There is no need to do that. In most cases urinary
incontinence can be controlled and treated. If you are having bladder
control problems, don’t suffer in silence. Talk to your doctor.
At least 1 in 10 people age 65 or older has this problem.
It is estimated that 2/3 of women with Stress urinary incontinence
(SUI) have not discussed the condition with their physicians. Some of
the reasons why include:
Embarrassment
A belief that it's a normal part of aging
The availability of absorbent products
Poor knowledge of management options
Low expectations for treatment
Symptoms can range from mild leaking to uncontrollable wetting.
Women are more likely than men to have incontinence.
Aging does not cause incontinence. It can occur for many reasons. For
example, Urinary tract infections, vaginal infection, or irritation, constipation
certain medicines can cause bladder control problems that last a short
time. Sometimes incontinence lasts longer. This might be due to problems
such as:
- Weak bladder muscles,
- Overactive bladder muscles,
- Blockage from an enlarged prostate,
- Damage to nerves that control the bladder from diseases such as multiple
sclerosis or Parkinson’s disease, or diseases such as arthritis
that can make walking painful and slow.
urinary incontinence is the inability to control urination. The
term may be used interchangeably with Over Active Bladder (OAB).
People who suffer from overactive bladder, or urinary incontinence,
can't hold their urine - they wet themselves. It is often temporary, and
it always results from an underlying medical condition.
Leaking urine is normal only in infants; it is not a normal result of
aging. If you have this problem, you may be too embarrassed or upset to
ask for help. Don't be.
Incidence
Incontinence affects all ages, both sexes, and people of every social
and economic level. It is also estimated that 15 to 30 percent of people
over the age of 60 have incontinence. Women are twice as likely, than
men to have this condition. Pregnancy and childbirth, menopause, and the
structure of the female urinary tract account for this difference. But
both women and men can become incontinent from neurologic injury, birth
defects, strokes, multiple sclerosis, and physical problems associated
with aging.
Older women more often than younger women, experience incontinence. But
incontinence is not inevitable with age. Incontinence is treatable and
often curable at all ages.
Incontinence is classified by the symptoms of or circumstances occurring
at the time of urine leakage.
Stress Incontinence
Mixed Incontinence
Environmental Incontinence |
Urge Incontinence
Overflow Incontinence
Nocturnal Incontinence |
Stress Incontinence
If coughing, laughing, sneezing, or other movements that put pressure
on the bladder cause you to leak urine, you may have stress incontinence.
Physical changes resulting from pregnancy, childbirth, and menopause often
cause stress incontinence. It is the most common form of incontinence
in women and is treatable.
Pelvic floor muscles support your bladder. If these muscles weaken, your
bladder can move downward, pushing slightly out of the bottom of the pelvis
toward the vagina. This prevents muscles that ordinarily force the urethra
shut from squeezing as tightly as they should. As a result, urine can
leak into the urethra during moments of physical stress. Stress incontinence
also occurs if the muscles that do the squeezing weaken.
Stress incontinence can worsen during the week before your menstrual period.
At that time, lowered estrogen levels might lead to lower muscular pressure
around the urethra, increasing chances of leakage. The incidence of stress
incontinence increases following menopause.
Urge Incontinence
If you lose urine for no apparent reason while suddenly feeling the need
or urge to urinate, you may have urge incontinence. The most common cause
of urge incontinence is inappropriate bladder contractions.
Medical professionals describe such a bladder as "unstable,"
"spastic," or "overactive." Your doctor might call
your condition "reflex incontinence" if it results from overactive
nerves controlling the bladder.
Urge incontinence can mean that your bladder empties during sleep, after
drinking a small amount of water, or when you touch water or hear it running
(as when washing dishes or hearing someone else taking a shower).
Involuntary actions of bladder muscles can occur because of damage to
the nerves of the bladder, to the nervous system (spinal cord and brain),
or to the muscles themselves. Multiple sclerosis, Parkinson's disease,
Alzheimer's disease, stroke, and injury -including injury that occurs
during surgery - all can harm bladder nerves or muscles.
Mixed Incontinence
Mixed incontinence is often a combination of both conditions above -
stress and urge incontinence
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Overflow Incontinence
If your bladder is always full so that it frequently leaks urine, you
have overflow incontinence. Weak bladder muscles or a blocked urethra
can cause this type of incontinence. Nerve damage from diabetes or other
diseases can lead to weak bladder muscles; tumors and urinary stones can
block the urethra. Overflow incontinence is rare in women. Benign enlargement
of prostate in an elderly male can lead to Acute/ Chronic Retention of
urine in the overflow incontinence.
Environmental or Functional Incontinence
Environmental incontinence sometimes called functional incontinence occurs
when people cannot get to the toilet or get a bedpan when they need it.
The urinary system may work well, but physical or mental disabilities
or other circumstances prevent normal toilet usage. A person with Alzheimer's
disease, for example, may not think well enough to plan a timely trip
to a restroom.
Nocturnal Incontinence
Nocturnal enuresis is incontinence that occurs during sleep.
Types of Incontinence
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TYPE
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Definition
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Mechanism
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Disorder
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Urge
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Inability to delay voiding once the urge occurs.
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Detrusor (Bladder) Hyperactivity
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Idopathic (commonly in the elderly)
Genitourinary condition (Bladder inflammation, Stone.)
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Stress
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Loss of urine with increased abdominal pressure
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Urinary bladder Sphincter failure
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Weak or injured pelvic muscle, Sphincter weakness.
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Overflow
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Partial retention of urine behind the obstruction
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Outlet obstruction,
Loss of nerve supply.
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Obstructive bladder (enlarged prostate, Stricture, Cystocele)
Neuropathic (Diabetes, nerve injury)
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Functional
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Inability to get to the toilet in time.
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Physical or Cognative Impairment
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Dementia or delirium, physical limitations (lack of mobility),
Psychological / Behavioral
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Diagnosis
The first step toward relief is to see an urologist. An urologist specializes
in the urinary tract, and some urologists further specialize in the female
urinary tract.
To diagnose the problem, your symptoms and medical history is taken.
Your pattern of voiding and urine leakage may suggest the type of incontinence.
Other obvious factors that can help define the problem include straining
and discomfort, use of drugs, recent surgery, and illness. If your medical
history does not define the problem, it will at least suggest which tests
are needed.
You shall be physically examined for signs of medical conditions causing
incontinence, such as tumors that block the urinary tract, stool impaction,
and poor reflexes or sensations, which may be evidence of a nerve-related
cause.
The doctor will measure your bladder capacity and residual urine for
evidence of poorly functioning bladder muscles. To do this, you will drink
plenty of fluids and urinate into a measuring pan, after which the doctor
will measure any urine remaining in the bladder. The doctor may also recommend
one or more of the following tests,
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Stress Test
Ultrasound
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Urinalysis
Cystoscopy
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Blood Tests
Urodynamics
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Stress test--You relax, then cough vigorously as the doctor watches for
loss of urine.
Urinalysis--Urine is tested for evidence of infection, urinary stones,
or other contributing causes.
Blood tests--Blood is taken, sent to a laboratory, and examined for substances
related to causes of incontinence.
Ultrasound--Sound waves are used to "see" the kidneys, ureters,
bladder, and urethra.
Cystoscopy--A thin tube with a tiny camera is inserted in the urethra
and used to see the inside of the urethra and bladder.
Urodynamics--Various techniques measure pressure in the bladder and the
flow of urine.
Your doctor may ask you to keep a diary for a day or more, up to a week,
to record when you void. This diary should note the times you urinate
and the amounts of urine you produce. To measure your urine, you can use
a special pan that fits over the toilet rim.
Treatment
Yes, many types of treatment are available for incontinence. Only a qualified
specialist can recommend the treatment that is best for your condition.
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Pelvic Muscle Exercises
Timed Voiding or Bladder Training
Implants
Catheterization
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Electrical Stimulation
Medications
Surgery
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Pelvic Muscle Exercises
Pelvic muscle exercises are intended to tone pelvic muscles and prevent
leakage. Kegel exercises to strengthen or retrain the pelvic floor muscles
and sphincter muscles can reduce or cure stress leakage.
Women of all ages can learn and practice these exercises. Success of
the Kegel exercises can be attained by doing the exercises regularly and
correctly through slow and focused movements. Bladder retraining (gradually
prolonging the time between visits to the toilet), along with reasonable
fluid intake, has helped many people with incontinence
Electrical Stimulation
Brief doses of electrical stimulation can strengthen muscles in the lower
pelvis in a way similar to exercising the muscles. Electrodes are temporarily
placed in the vagina or rectum to stimulate nearby muscles. This will
stabilize overactive muscles and stimulate contraction of urethral muscles.
Electrical stimulation can be used to reduce both stress incontinence
and urge incontinence.
Timed Voiding or Bladder Training
Timed voiding (urinating) and bladder training are techniques that use
biofeedback. In timed voiding, you fill in a chart of voiding and leaking.
From the patterns that appear in your chart, you can plan to empty your
bladder before you would otherwise leak.
Biofeedback and muscle conditioning - known as bladder training - can
alter the bladder's schedule for storing and emptying urine. Frequent
urination may cause your bladder to weaken; therefore, bladder training
helps you reduce the number of times you urinate, which assists in increasing
your urinary capacity. These techniques are effective for urge and overflow
incontinence.
Medications
Medications that may be taken as infrequently as once daily may be prescribed
to treat overactive bladder. Some drugs inhibit contractions of an overactive
bladder. Others relax muscles, leading to more complete bladder emptying
during urination. Some drugs tighten muscles at the bladder neck and urethra,
preventing leakage. And some, especially hormones such as estrogen, are
believed to cause muscles involved in urination to function normally.
Some of these medications can produce harmful side effects if used for
long periods. In particular, estrogen therapy has been associated with
an increased risk for cancers of the breast and endometrium (lining
of the uterus). The doctor can inform you about the risks and benefits
of long-term use of medications.
Implants
Implants are substances injected into tissues around the urethra. The
implant adds bulk and helps to close the urethra to reduce stress incontinence.
Implants can be injected by a doctor in about half an hour using local
anesthesia.
Implants have a partial success rate. Injections must be repeated after
a time because the body slowly eliminates the substances. Before you receive
collagen, a doctor must perform a skin test to determine whether you would
have an allergic reaction to the material.
Surgery
Doctors usually suggest surgery to alleviate incontinence only after
other treatments have been tried. Many surgical options have high rates
of success.
Most stress incontinence results from the bladder dropping down toward
the vagina. Therefore, common surgery for stress incontinence involves
pulling the bladder up to a more normal position. Working through an incision
in the vagina or abdomen, the surgeon raises the bladder and secures it
with a string attached to muscle, ligament, or bone.
For severe cases of stress incontinence, the surgeon may secure the bladder
with a wide sling. This not only holds up the bladder but also compresses
the bottom of the bladder and the top of the urethra, further preventing
leakage.
In rare cases, a surgeon implants an artificial sphincter, a doughnut-shaped
sac that circles the urethra. A fluid fills and expands the sac, which
squeezes the urethra closed. By pressing a valve implanted under the skin,
you can cause the artificial sphincter to deflate. This removes pressure
from the urethra, allowing urine from the bladder to pass.
Catheterization
If you are incontinent because your bladder never empties completely
(overflow incontinence) or your bladder cannot empty because of poor muscle
tone, past surgery, or spinal cord injury, you might use a catheter to
empty your bladder. A catheter is a tube that you can learn to insert
through the urethra into the bladder to drain urine. Catheters may be
used once in a while or on a constant basis, in which case the tube connects
to a bag that you can attach to your leg.
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