Incontinence (short)
- Issues
- Impaired ability or willingness to reach a toilet
- Illness, injury, or restraint that interferes with mobility
- Irritation or inflammation in or around lower urinary tract
- Urinary tract infection (symptomatic with frequency, urgency, sudden onset, or worsening of continence, unexplained fever, or decline in functioning)
- Atrophic vaginitis or urethritis Oral or topical estrogen
- Stool impaction
- Increased urine production
- Metabolic (hyperglycemia, hypercalcemia)
- Excess fluid intake
- Volume overload
- Stress urinary incontinence
- Usually due to dysfunction urethral sphincter
- Involuntary leakage due to increases in intra-abdominal pressure on effort or exertion (eg on laughing, sneezing, coughing and lifting)
- Patient can usually predict which activities will cause leakage
- In severe cases, it occurs with minimal activity (eg walking, standing from sitting) and limited awareness of leakage
- Risks
- prostatectomy
- TURP
- pelvic trauma
- Childbirth
- Obesity
- Post-prostatectomy
- Urge urinary incontinence/ overactive bladder
- Frequency and nocturia
- hyperexcitability, increased nerve activity
- Risks
- neurological conditions
- parkinsons
- stroke
- inflammatory
- ageing
- stressors
- Rule out UTI, stones, carcinoma in situ
- Overflow (urinary retention)
- Involuntary leakage with loss of fullness sensation from an overdistended bladder
- Associated with obstructive symptoms such as dribbling, hesitancy and poor stream
- Patient often feels that there is incomplete bladder emptying
- Tends to occur with post-void residual volumes of >300 mL
- Due to
- Overdistention of the bladder from impaired detrusor contractility or bladder outlet obstruction
- Etiology
- anticholinergic agents
- Benign prostatic hyperplasia
- Pelvic organ prolapse
- Diabetes mellitus
- Multiple sclerosis
- Spinal cord injuries
- Faecal impaction
- Prostatomegaly or pelvic mass
- Work out type of incontinence
Workup
- Functional status
- Impact of incontinence on quality of life
- Abdominal/pelvic/ PR exam/ neuro
- urine MCS
- USS kUB, Measure post void residual
- Bladder diary
- Check renal function, fasting glucose
Indications for specialist
- Haematuria
- Suspected pelvic mass or urogenital fistulae
- Symptomatic prolapse
- Palpable bladder after voiding
- Persistent pelvic pain
- Suspected neurological disease
- Voiding difficulty
- Previous continence surgery or pelvic cancer surgery
- Poor response to conservative management
- Unclear type/diagnosis of incontinence
Treatment
- Aim: first-line treatment for urinary incontinence and can improve urinary symptoms and QoL
“feeling dry, being natural, not causing embarrassment, being easy and not resulting in dependence”
Pharmacological
- Mixed/ OAB
- try antimuscarinics – treats overactive detrusor
- Micrabegron
- Botox injection
- Anticholinergic agents
- Oxybutynin/ditropan – 5mg TDS
- Non selective- more SE’s – dry mouth, constipation, blurred vision, drowsiness, delirium
- Caution drug interactions
- Contraindicated glaucoma
- Can try patches – less systemic side effects – skin can react though
- Avoid Anticholinergics (e.g. Oxybutynin) in stress incontinence
- Not effective in Stress Incontinence (and may worsen symptoms)
- can cause confusion
- can interfere with the positive effects of cholinesterase inhibitors used for the treatment of dementia
- Oxybutynin/ditropan – 5mg TDS
- alpha or beta adrenoceptor agonists
- mirabegron
- Upregulates sympathetic activity – reduces destrusor
- Caution if HTN or long QT
- Can combine with anti-cholinergic
- mirabegron
- serotonin–norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors
- duloxatine
- botulinum toxin A
- For women:
- intravaginal topical oestrogen
- For men:
- alpha adrenoceptors antagonists ( if BPH present)
- Tamsulosin (Flomax)
- 5-alpha reductase inhibitors
- alpha adrenoceptors antagonists ( if BPH present)
- Asymptomatic bacteriuria (ASB)
- is a common occurrence in RACFs and antimicrobial therapy does not result in improved outcomes.
- there is potential for harm from side effects of antimicrobials and the development of resistant organisms, thus treatment of ASB (unlike true UTIs) is not recommended
Non-pharm
- Bladder training
- prompted or scheduled voiding
- Physical therapies
- Pelvic floor muscle training and vaginal cones
- caffeine reduction
- managing fluid intake
- treating constipation (given the complex interplay between bladder and bowel function)
- minimising medications that incontinence (eg diuretics, calcium channel blockers, alpha-adrenoceptor antagonists, antipsychotics, benzodiazepines, antidepressants and hormone replacement therapy)
- Weight loss
- Cease smoking
- Passive containment
- Continence products – Continence Aids Payment Scheme
- Bedpans
continence management plan
- bladder training program
- continence products such as pads, catheters or condom drainage
- advice on how to keep your bladder and bowel healthy
- trip planner/toilet map app provides:
- locations of toilets
- opening hours
- accessibility for people with disabilities
- Master Locksmith Access Key (MLAK) access
- details of other nearby toilets.
- For stress – often need surgery
- For women: sling procedures, colposuspension, urethropexy
- For men: prostatectomy, artificial urinary sphincter, male sling