Gaps, Issues and Challenges in the Implementation of Mother Tongue Based-Mult...
Types, Causes and Management of Urinary Incontinence
1. Diaa Mohammad Srahin
5th year Medical Student
Al-Quds University
Obstetrics & Gynecology
March / 2018
Dr. Mashoor Nasan
2. Introduction
Urinary incontinence is the inability to hold urine,
producing involuntary urinary leakage.
It is specially problematic because it is affects personal
hygiene as well as social life.
It is increasingly prevalent as the ageing population
expands.
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4. The prevalence increases with age, with approximately
5 % of women between 15 and 44 years of age being
affected, rising to 10 % of those aged between 45 and
64 years, and approximately 20 % of those older than
65 years.
It’s far beyond wetting clothes !!
Social Impact
Psychological impact
Physical morbidity
7. Physiology of continence
Continence and micturition involve a balance between urethral closure and detrusor
muscle activity.
Urethral pressure normally exceeds bladder pressure, resulting in urine remaining in the
bladder.
The proximal urethra and bladder are normally both within the pelvis.
Intraabdominal pressure increases (from coughing and sneezing) are transmitted to both
urethra and bladder equally, leaving the pressure differential unchanged, resulting in
continence.
Normal voiding is the result of changes in both of these pressure factors: urethral
pressure falls and bladder pressure rises.
Spontaneous bladder muscle (detrusor) contractions are normally easily suppressed
voluntarily.
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11. Pharmacology of Incontinence
a -adrenergic receptors.
These are found primarily in the urethra and when stimulated
cause contraction of urethral smooth muscle, preventing
micturition.
b-adrenergic receptors.
These are found primarily in the detrusor muscle and when
stimulated cause relaxation of the bladder wall, preventing
micturition.
Cholinergic receptors.
These are found primarily in the detrusor muscle and when
stimulated cause contraction of the bladder wall, enhancing
micturition.
14. Cystometric studies
Basic office cystometry begins with the patient emptying her bladder as
much as possible. A urinary catheter is first used to empty the bladder
and then left in place to infuse saline by gravity, with a syringe into the
bladder retrograde assessing the following:
Residual volume. How much is left in the bladder?
Sensation-of-fullness volume. How much infusion (in mL) until the
patient senses fluid in her bladder?
Urge-to-void volume. How much infusion (in mL) until the patient feels
the need to empty her bladder?
Involuntary bladder contractions. By watching the saline level in the
syringe rise or fall, involuntary detrusor contractions can be detected. The
absence of contractions is normal.
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17. The following are parameters of normal bladder function:
Residual urine of <50 mL.
First desire to void between 150 and 200 mL.
Capacity between 400 and 600 mL.
Detrusor pressure rise of <15 cmH2O during filing and
standing.
Absence of systolic detrusor contractions.
No leakage on coughing.
A voiding detrusor pressure rise of <70 cmH2O with a peak
flow rate of >15 mL/second for a volume >150 mL.
18. Classification of Incontinence
Urinary incontinence is classified according to pathophysiological
concepts rather than symptomatology.
but the following definitions of
symptoms are commonly used.
19. Urodynamic stress incontinence
Urodynamic stress incontinence (USI), previously
called genuine stress incontinence.
is defied as the involuntary leakage of urine during
increased abdominal pressure in the absence of a
detrusor contraction.
This is the most common incontinence in young
women.
20. Rises in bladder pressure because of intra-abdominal
pressure increases (e.g., coughing and sneezing) are
not transmitted to the proximal urethra because it is
no longer a pelvic structure owing to loss of support
from pelvic relaxation.
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22. The etiology of USI is thought to be related to a number of factors:
Damage to the nerve supply of the pelvic floor and urethral sphincter.
Menopause and associated tissue atrophy may also cause damage to the
pelvic floor.
A congenital cause may be inferred, This may be due to altered
connective tissue, particularly collagen.
Chronic causes, such as obesity and chronic obstructive pulmonary
disease, raise intra-abdominal pressure, and constipation and
associated straining may also result in problems.
23. History
Loss of urine occurs in small spurts simultaneously with coughing or sneezing.
It does not take place when the patient is sleeping.
Examination
Pelvic examination may reveal a cystocele. Neurologic examination is normal.
The Q-tip test is positive when a lubricated cotton-tip applicator is placed in
the urethra and the patient increases intra-abdominal pressure, the Q-tip will
rotate >30 degrees.
Investigative studies. Urinalysis and culture are normal. Cystometric studies
are normal with no involuntary detrusor contractions seen.
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28. Management
Medical therapy includes Kegel exercises and estrogen replacement in
postmenopausal women.
Surgical therapy aims to elevate the urethral sphincter so that it is again an
intra-abdominal location (urethropexy).
This is done by attachment of the sphincter to the symphysis pubis, using the
Burch procedure as well as the Marshall Marchetti-Kranz (MMK) procedure.
The success rate of both of these procedures is 85–90%.
A minimally invasive surgical procedure is the tension-free vaginal tape
procedure in which a mesh tape is placed transcutaneously around and under
the mid urethra. It does not elevate the urethra but forms a resistant platform
against intra-abdominal pressure.
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34. Bladder over-activity
It’s a bladder contraction during filling phase (< 400ml
volume). So, it’s characterized by
Urgency
Frequency
Nocturia
35. Motor Urge (Hypertonic) Incontinence. This is the
most common incontinence in older women.
It can be wet (there is urinary incontinence) or dry (no
urinary incontinence).
Etiology
Involuntary rises in bladder pressure occur from idiopathic
detrusor contractions that cannot be voluntarily
suppressed.
36. History
Loss of urine occurs in large amounts often without warning. This can
take place both day and night. The most common symptom is urgency.
Examination
Pelvic examination shows normal anatomy. Neurologic examination is
normal.
Investigative studies
Urinalysis and culture are normal.
Cystometric studies show normal residual volume, but involuntary
detrusor contractions are present even with small volumes of urine in
the bladder.
40. Retention with over-flow
It’s leakage secondary to over-distended bladder,
which becomes higher than urethral pressure. There
is no or poor bladder contraction
Pathophysiology
Detrusor muscle hypotonia
Denervated bladder
Medication like anti-cholinergic or alpha agonist
Urethral obstruction
41. Overflow (Hypotonic) Incontinence
Etiology
Rises in bladder pressure occur gradually from an over-
distended, hypotonic bladder. When the bladder pressure
exceeds the urethral pressure, involuntary urine
loss occurs but only until the bladder pressure equals
urethral pressure.
The bladder never empties.
Then the process begins all over. This may be caused by
denervated bladder (e.g., diabetic neuropathy, multiple
sclerosis) or systemic medications (e.g., anticholinergics).
42. History
Loss of urine occurs intermittently in small amounts. This can take
place both day and night. The patient may complain of pelvic
fullness.
Examination
Pelvic examination may show normal anatomy; however, the
neurologic
examination will show decreased pudendal nerve sensation.
Investigative studies
Urinalysis and culture are usually normal, but may show an infection.
Cystometric studies show markedly increased residual volume, but
involuntary detrusor contractions do not occur.
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44. Management
Intermittent self-catheterization may be necessary.
Discontinue the offending systemic medications.
Cholinergic medications to stimulate bladder
contractions and a-adrenergic blocker to relax the
bladder neck.
45. Sensory Irritative Incontinence
Etiology
Involuntary rises in bladder pressure occur owing to
detrusor contractions stimulated by irritation from any
of the following bladder conditions: infection, stone,
tumor, or a foreign body.
History
Loss of urine occurs with urgency, frequency, and
dysuria. This can take place day or night.
46. Examination
Suprapubic tenderness may be elicited, but otherwise the pelvic examination is
unremarkable.
Investigative studies
A urinalysis will show the following abnormalities:
bacteria and white blood cells (suggest an infection) or red blood cells (suggest
a stone, foreign body, or tumor).
A urine culture is positive if an infection is present.
Cystometric studies (which are usually unnecessary) would reveal normal
residual volume with involuntary detrusor contractions present.
Management
Infections are treated with antibiotics.
Cytoscopy is used to diagnose and remove stones, foreign bodies, and tumors.
47. Congenital causes
Intra-urethral
Epispidias, it’s due to failure of midline fusion of
mesoderm. It’s associated with widening of bladder
neck and short urethra.
48. Congenital causes
Extra-urethral cause
Bladder exstrophy is failure of mesoderm migration with
absence of anterior bladder wall, anterior bladder wall
Ectopic ureter
49. Fistula
Can be
Gynecological cause like 95% due to pelvic surgery and
radiation. Pelvic tumor can cause fistula
Obstetric cause like childbirth, in which bladder is
compressed between head of fetus and bony pelvis
Can be uretrovaginal, vesicovaginal and urethrovaginal
50. History
The patient usually has a history of radical pelvic surgery or pelvic radiation therapy.
Loss of urine occurs continually in small amounts. This can take place both day and
night.
Examination
Pelvic examination may show normal anatomy and normal neurologic findings.
Investigative studies
Urinalysis and culture are normal.
An intravenous pyelogram (IVP) will demonstrate dye leakage from a urinary tract
fistula. With a urinary tractvaginal fistula, intravenous indigo carmine dye will leak onto
a vaginal tampon.
Management
can be treated by primary closure or by surgery and can be delayed until tissue
inflammation and edema have resolved at about 4 weeks.