Overactive Bladder
Are you part of the Overactive Bladder Club? You could be if you experience these
symptoms:
- Urgency: Gotta go now!
- Urge incontinence: Gotta go now, with leakage
- Frequency: Gotta go often
- Nocturia: Gotta go all night long
These feelings happen when your bladder muscles squeeze to empty out urine even when
your bladder isn’t full (a full bladder holds about two cupfuls). Your urogynecologist
may suggest one or a combination of treatments, including the following:
- Lifestyle changes, including using pads, making diet changes and training yourself to go only when
you really need to go. A bladder diary can be helpful in tracking frequency.
- Physical therapy. Pelvic floor exercises, including Kegel exercises, can retrain and strengthen your
bladder muscles. Used in conjunction with exercise, biofeedback can help you pinpoint
and better control these muscles.
- Medications, including bladder muscle relaxants.
- Botox injections. When injected into the bladder wall muscles, Botox can effectively relax these muscles
for several months, reducing inappropriate urges to go and allowing your bladder to
hold more urine.
- Percutaneous tibial nerve stimulation (PTNS). A form of neuromodulation therapy, PTNS is 12-week series of 30-minute treatments
that deliver a mild electronic stimulation to the nerves that control bladder function.
- InterStim. This neuromodulation device is implanted in the body and sends gentle electronic
pulses to the nerves that control bladder function, helping to regulate them.
Urinary Retention
Urinary retention is an uncomfortable condition where you may feel an urgent need
to urinate but simply can’t. You may have trouble starting or have a weak stream or
feel as though you still need to go, even though you’ve just gone. Because you can’t
empty your bladder completely, this leads to discomfort or pain, bloating and infection.
If you’re not able to urinate at all, this is an emergency condition and you should
seek help right away.
Urinary retention most commonly affects those in their 70s and 80s and may be caused
by:
- Obstruction (blockage) of the urethra, the tube that carries urine out of the body;
- Medications
- Nerve problems or weakened bladder muscles.
We offer the following treatments and care for patients suffering from urinary retention:
- Catheter management: A patient suffering from chronic urinary retention may require one-time, regular
or ongoing catheter management to help release urine.
- Treatment of obstructions: Including correcting blockages caused by prolapse, slings or other procedures.
- InterStim: This neuromodulation device is implanted in the body and sends gentle electronic
pulses to the nerves that control bladder function, helping to regulate them.
Stress Incontinence (Leaky Bladder)
Coughing. Sneezing. Laughing. Exercise. These common activities can all trigger a
urine leak if you suffer from stress incontinence.
Stress incontinence happens when there are problems with the muscles or nerves that
help to hold or release urine. Our urogynecology practice offers a wide range of conservative
and surgical procedures that can help stop frustrating bladder leaks, including:
- Physical therapy. Pelvic floor exercises, including Kegel exercises, can help strengthen your bladder
muscles.
- Pessaries, rubber rings similar to the outer ring of a diaphragm. When inserted into the vagina, pessaries can help control incontinence.
- Bulking therapy. During this in-office or outpatient procedure, your urogynecologist injects a safe
gel-like material around the urethra, the tube that carries urine out of your body.
The gel bulks up the area to help block leakages.
- Surgery. A surgically implanted sling or permanent sutures support the urethra. Up to 90
percent of women undergoing these procedures experience improvement or cure. Learn more about mid-urethral slings from the American Urogynecologic Society and the Society of Urodynamics, Female Pelvic
Medicine & Urogenital Reconstruction.
Other Conditions
Our experienced urogynecology practice also treats many other bladder control conditions,
including:
- Mixed incontinence, such as a combination of stress incontinence (leaky bladder) and overactive bladder.
- Unpredictable incontinence, unexpected leakage
- Fistulas, which are holes in the bladder wall that cause leakages into the vagina.