| Treatment Provides Welcome Relief
For Women With Urinary Incontinence
<< Back
 |
"As women get older, the urge problem becomes more prevalent
and is much more unpredictable."
- T. Fleming Mattox, M.D. |
|
It’s embarrassing, uncomfortable, and is accompanied by irritation
and a distinctly unpleasant odor. Yet many women who experience
urinary incontinence wait months or even years before they seek
medical attention that could successfully treat their problem.
“A lot of women end up isolating themselves. Social isolation
is a big part of incontinence,” said Dr. Fleming Mattox, an
associate professor in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology’s
Division of Urogynecology. Based in Greenville, South Carolina,
Dr. Mattox travels to Columbia every Tuesday to treat patients at
University Specialty Clinics.
Age Plays A Factor
Urinary incontinence is not uncommon; in fact, an estimated 20
million women in the United States suffer from some type of urine
leakage. As women age, the incidence increases, affecting 40 percent
of women by the time they are in their seventies. Incontinence ranks
as one of the top four reasons women are placed in nursing homes.
Yet women don’t have to accept that incontinence is an unavoidable
affliction that accompanies aging. A number of treatment options
are available, and 86 percent of patients who pursue treatment make
significant improvement, including complete restoration of bladder
control.
When women seek medical attention for incontinence, Dr. Mattox’s
first step is to conduct a comprehensive physical exam. “You
don’t want to miss anything. Incontinence is one of the great
mimickers,” he said. He elaborated, “A patient can have
heart disease and it can mask itself as urinary incontinence. Diabetes
is another example. I find one patient a month who’s convinced
she needs a pill for incontinence and turned out to be diabetic.”
Two Common Forms
A number of medical conditions and medications prescribed for other
problems can cause incontinence, which is seen most frequently in
two forms. Women with stress incontinence may leak urine when they
engage in exercise or other strenuous activity, or simply when they
cough, sneeze or laugh. Urge incontinence involves leakage that
occurs before a woman can get to the bathroom in response to an
urge to urinate. “As women get older, the urge problem becomes
more prevalent and is much more unpredictable,” said Dr. Mattox.
Some women experience both forms or mixed incontinence. The two
problems may not be related and need to be addressed separately.
“Typically you would treat them for the urge incontinence
first and see how they improve,” he said.
Once a woman’s particular situation is evaluated through
a thorough exam and any diagnostic testing that may be needed, treatment
can include medication, Kegel exercises to strengthen the pelvic
floor muscles that help control the bladder, bladder retraining
to teach a patient to urinate on a timetable rather than on the
urge to do so, and diet modification to eliminate foods that irritate
the bladder. Dr. Mattox is referred many complex incontinence problems;
about 40 percent of these patients eventually require surgical treatment.
Surgical Treatment
While surgery to treat incontinence has historically met with varying
degrees of success, this has changed with the development of advanced
procedures such as suburethral sling and retropubic urethropexy.
One of the newest procedures available enables surgeons to place
a suburethral sling on an outpatient basis. The sling is made from
permanent material, and current evidence suggests that this has
the best long-term success compared to other slings. “These
procedures are considered to be the gold standard for treating incontinence.
Ninety percent of patients are immediately dry after surgery,”
Dr. Mattox said.
Reprinted from Connections newsletter, July 2002
Connections is produced twice a year by University Specialty Clinics.
Connections articles are copyrighted and may be download
and/or reprinted for personal use only. Prior written consent is
required in order to reprint or electronically reproduce any articles,
graphics, and photographs appearing on the website. For more information,
contact Diane J. Epperly, Connections editor, at surreyracewriter@sbcglobal.net.
|