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Review
. 1992 Aug;4(4):554-8.

Nonsurgical treatment of urinary incontinence

Affiliations
  • PMID: 1354505
Review

Nonsurgical treatment of urinary incontinence

M D Walters et al. Curr Opin Obstet Gynecol. 1992 Aug.

Abstract

Genuine stress urinary incontinence can be treated by surgical or nonsurgical methods. Conservative treatments include pelvic muscle exercises, hormonal and nonhormonal pharmacologic therapy, and functional electrical stimulation with vaginal or anal electrodes. All of these methods improve or cure stress incontinence in a significant proportion of selected women, with less cost and morbidity. Patients with genuine stress incontinence generally should have a trial of conservative therapy before corrective surgery is offered. Behavioral and pharmacologic methods, alone and in combination, are used for women with detrusor instability. Behavioral regimens, including bladder retraining and biofeedback, are particularly effective for urge and stress incontinence, but are dependent on compliance and motivation of both patient and caregiver. Drug therapy is effective, but with potential morbidity. As with genuine stress incontinence, surgical methods should only be employed for patients with detrusor instability who do not respond to nonsurgical treatment.

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