What is urinary incontinence?
Urinary incontinence is when you lose control of your bladder. It can cause you to accidentally release a small amount of urine or to completely empty your bladder. There are several different types of it, and both men and women can develop urinary continence for a variety of reasons.
You may feel a bit embarrassed about it, but it’s pretty common, and a doctor can usually help you to address it. If you’re experiencing urinary incontinence for the first time, a physician will need to evaluate you to make sure you don’t have an underlying condition.
Who gets urinary incontinence?
Women are about twice as likely to suffer from urinary incontinence as men. And they’re more likely to develop it during pregnancy. A growing fetus puts pressure on the bladder, making it harder for pregnant women to control it.
Postpartum women also have higher rates of urinary incontinence because giving birth can damage or weaken the muscles involved in urinating.
The risk of developing urinary incontinence also increases:
- with age,
- if you have obesity or neurodegenerative diseases like Parkinson’s disease and multiple sclerosis,
- or if you have a family history of urinary incontinence.
How common is urinary incontinence?
In population-based research, the number of people who experience urinary incontinence ranges from just under 10% to 36%, and more than twice the amount of older women have it than older men. [1]
Even though many people deal with urine leakage, it’s rarely talked about because for some it feels embarrassing. Talking to a physician can really help though, as they can walk you through treatment options to manage your symptoms.
What types of incontinence are there?
There are five different types of urinary incontinence: stress, urge, overflow, functional, and mixed incontinence.[2] The two most common types are stress urinary incontinence and urge urinary incontinence.
Stress incontinence
Stress incontinence is the result of pressure on your bladder from the muscles around it. Many pregnant women experience stress incontinence because of the weight of the growing fetus and from the kicks and jabs as it moves around in the uterus. Other people may leak urine when they have abdominal spasms that result from laughing, coughing, or sneezing.
Urge incontinence
Urge incontinence is different from stress incontinence. People who have this type of urinary incontinence get sudden, strong urges to urinate. The urge is so strong that they can’t make it to the bathroom before their bladder releases urine. Drinking caffeine or alcohol can cause urge incontinence, but there may also be an underlying condition that’s causing it.
Overflow incontinence
Overflow incontinence is characterised by small amounts of urine that escape throughout the day. If you don’t fully empty your bladder when you go to the bathroom, it can lead to overflow incontinence.
Functional incontinence
This type of incontinence happens when you experience a physical or mental issue that prevents you from reaching the bathroom before your bladder relieves itself.
Mixed incontinence
People who show signs of more than one type of urinary incontinence are diagnosed with mixed incontinence. If you suffer from two or more types of urinary incontinence, talk to your physician to figure out why you have mixed incontinence and how to treat it.