Less Intrusive Urinary Incontinence Treatment

By Olivia Cross


Urinary incontinence is an embarrassing problem that few people are at liberty to talk of. Earlier, urinary incontinence was thought to affect the old but nowadays, it affecting people across both genders and age groups. However, over 75% of all those seeking urinary incontinence treatment are the womenfolk.

Different interventions are made by doctors depending on the type and severity of your urinary incontinence. The urologist may suggest performing a surgery, prescribe some drugs or teach you some exercises for bladder training and strengthen muscles at the pelvic. There are several conservative treatments available for the problem. However, if the cause of the incontinence is another ailment, you have to be treated for the ailment prior or along with treatment for incontinence. Common conditions that cause incontinence include fistula, which is a tear in the uterus due to prolonged labor during childbirth and enlargement of prostrate gland in men.

Changing few aspects of your lifestyle is the first form of treatment that does not involve medical intervention. Your urologist may suggest that you modify some habits to relieve the symptoms. Such changes could be lowering the intake of water and other fluids in the day so as to bring down the amount of urine that you generate.

Caffeine also causes you to produce large quantities of urine from your body. Large quantities are found in coffee, cola drinks and sports drinks. The doctor may recommend taking little of such drinks. You may also be advised to check on your weight. Obesity can cause problems with the bladder and other parts of the body. Losing weight could alleviate some of the problems.

There are muscles at the pelvic area that control the passage of urine. They are found around the urethra and the bladder and keep the passage shut until one is ready to urinate. If they get weak or some condition damages them, they may be strengthened by a therapy. The therapy involves physical contraction of the muscles by a patient. It is performed at least thrice a day with at least eight contractions every session. The progress of patient is monitored by the doctor and program adjusted accordingly.

For those whose pelvic floor muscles do not respond to the therapy above, electrical stimulation could be of assistance. Electrical stimulation is done by a small device inserted in a vagina or the anus if the patient is a man. It measures the electrical charges in the floor muscles and releases small electrical pulses for further stimulation. It is a bit uncomfortable but great if done together with the therapy.

If you are suffering from urge incontinence, the doctor may recommend bladder training. In some cases, it may be combined with pelvic muscle training. The goal of bladder training is to increase the amount of time from when you feel the urge to urinate to when you do pass the urine. The training takes about six weeks.

For women with weak pelvic floor muscles and are unable to exercise them, vaginal cones could be of assistance. These are small weights that are inserted into vagina to help in pelvic floor muscle training. You are meant to hold the weights in place with your pelvic muscles. The weights come in different weights but, you start with the lightest to the heaviest. This kind of treatment is very helpful for women that suffer from stress incontinence.




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