Urinary incontinence
Appearance
Urge incontinence - involuntary leakage, immediately preceded by urgency - often overactive bladder or bladder neuropathy.
Stress incontinence - involuntary leakage which occurs when intra-abdominal pressure rises.
Incidence
[edit | edit source]- 5% men, 20% of women lifetime incidence
- 40% of women >60yo
- 50% of institutionalised elderly patients
Aetiology
[edit | edit source]- Children - often a/w
- Infections
- Constipation
- Psychological factors
- Intentional misconduct
- Increased fluid intake
- Overactive bladder
- Problems of social control
- Seen in dementia patients - uninhibited detrusor hyperreflexia and impaired social perception
- Storage problems
- Small bladder capacity owing to fibrosis (TB, RTx, interstitial cystitis)
- Small functional capacity owing to severe detrusor instability, neurogenic dysfunction or infection
- Impairment of emptying
- Small functional bladder capacities with detrusor overactivity causing incontinence, despite having large residual volumes of urine
- Weak sphincter
- Leads to genuine stress incontinence
- Can follow surgical procedures such as radical prostatectomy
- Fistulae
Aetiology by gender
[edit | edit source]- Men
- Chronic retention with overflow
- BPH
- Prostate cancer
- Urethral stricture
- Hypertrophy of bladder neck (younger men)
- Post-prostatectomy
- Injury to external sphincter mechanism
- Pelvic floor exercises
- Exclude anastomotic stricture
- Injury to external sphincter mechanism
- Chronic retention with overflow
- Women
- Stress incontinence - usually found in multiparous women with a history of difficult labour
- Minor symptoms can be controlled by pelvic floor exercises
- Surgery - colposuspension (sutures are placed between vaginal fascia and iliopubic ligament) or transvaginal tape
- Stress incontinence - usually found in multiparous women with a history of difficult labour
- Both genders
- Idiopathic detrusor overactivity
- Usually results in frequency, urgency, urge incontinence, noturia or enuresis
- Distinguish from GSI and BOO
- Exclude infection, TB and cancer
- Treat with anticholinergics (oxybutynin)
- Sometimes need enterocystoplasty or botox injections
- Ageing
- Smooth muscle dysfunction - small functional capacity, detrusor overactivity, impaired bladder emptying, LUTS
- Congenital
- Ectopic vesicae and severe epispadias
- Trauma
- Infection
- Neoplasia
- Direct invasion from cervical cancer or prostate cancer to the sphincter
- Idiopathic detrusor overactivity
History
[edit | edit source]- Apart from the obvious
- Constant dribbling coupled with normal micturition could be a ureteric fistula
- Nocturnal enuresis in adolescents - primary vs secondary - vast majority eventually get better once secondary causes have been excluded
Investigation
[edit | edit source]- Frequency voiding charts
- Urodynamic testing
- Artificially simulate bladder filling and emptying while taking pressure measurements
- Indications:
- Distinguishing stress incontinence from detrusor instability in women
- Classification of neurogenic bladder dysfunction
- Distinguish bladder outflow obstruction from idiopathic detrusor instability in men
- Low threshold in general for use in investigating incontinence or LUTS
- Overactive bladder
- Phasic increases in pressure give rise to urgency and urge incontinence
- Found in patients with neurogenic bladder dysfunction, such as MS or PD, or after a stroke or spinal cord injury
- 50% of men with BOO have detrusor instability, and in about half of them the problem resolves after prostatectomy
- Genuine stress incontinence
- Leakage due to increased abdominal pressure, not just increased true detrusor pressure
- Caused by sphincter weakness
- Chronic urinary retention
- Incontinence is secondary to overflow, with large residual volume
- Bladder outflow obstruction
- Increased voiding pressures, often in excess of 90cm H2O, coupled with low urinary flow rates
- Urine MCS
- Creatinine
Treatment
[edit | edit source]- Conservative - pelvic floor physio, bladder training, lifestyle
- Devices for collection - condom catheter, ISC
- Drugs
- Adrenergic blockers decrease strength of bladder neck
- Inhibit bladder activity - anticholinergics
- Increasing outlet - resistance colposuspension or TVT or slings, periurethral injections of bulking agents, artificial urinary sphincter
- Denervation of bladder - S3 blockade - rarely used nowadays
- Sacral nerve stimulation devices
- Augmentation of bladder
- Urinary diversion - ileal conduit, continent urinary diversion