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Urinary Incontinence

Screening

First step

You meet with a post-menopausal patient in your office. Even if urinary incontinence is not one of the reasons she's coming to see you, you need to ask her questions. "Do you ever experience involuntary urine leakage? Do you wear anything to protect yourself from urine loss?"

Embarrassment can be so significant that women may choose to wear absorbent undergarments or pads instead of talking about urinary incontinence.

They need help to overcome their hesitations to talk about it.

You can tell them:

Second step

If there is a urinary incontinence problem, follow up with a detailed history and a physical exam.

Evaluation of a female patient with urinary incontinence
HISTORY

Duration of symptoms

Frequency and quantity of leakage; timing of incontinence episodes

Circumstances surrounding incontinence (associated with urinary urges, sneezing, coughing, caffeine, alcohol, exercise, changes in position, the sound of water, sexual relations)

History of pregnancy and type of childbirth

History of surgeries

History of dementia, mobility problems

Problems with constipation, fecal incontinence

Impact on private and social life (at work, within family and couple relationships)

Medications that may contribute to urinary incontinence

  • some anticholinergics
  • antidepressants
  • antipsychotics
  • hypnotics/sedatives
  • antihistamines
  • narcotics
  • alpha-adrenergic agonists
  • diuretics

Nutrition and hydration profile

Environmental situation

PHYSICAL EXAM

Observation of the patient's mobility and dexterity

Cystocele

Pelvic prolapse

Atrophic vaginitis

Check for weakness of the pelvic floor muscles

Neurological deficit indicating a systemic disorder or lesion of the spinal cord

Neurological exam: cognitive function, frontal release signs

Examination of sacral nerves S2-S4 (sensitivity around the anus, anal muscle tone, anal and bulbocavernous reflexes)

Constipation

TESTS

Cough stress test

PVR (post-void residual urine volume) by echography or catheterization (abnormal> 100 cc)

Hypercalcemia, hyperglycemia

Urine analysis and culture

Cystoscopy if there is hematuria

Urodynamic tests if diagnosis is unclear or surgery is recommended

Voiding diary (time, circumstance, urgency)

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