Profile of urinary incontinent elderly in long-term care institutions
- PMID: 2109766
- DOI: 10.1111/j.1532-5415.1990.tb03542.x
Profile of urinary incontinent elderly in long-term care institutions
Abstract
This article presents a profile of incontinent elderly in long-term care institutions. One hundred thirty-three frail elderly women were recruited from seven nursing homes in central Pennsylvania for a three-year clinical trial to test the effectiveness of a behavioral therapy on urinary incontinence. All of the patients had more than one medical diagnosis. Eighty percent had cardiorespiratory conditions; the most prevalent diagnoses were cardiovascular diseases. Eighty percent had one or more neurological diseases, including "organic brain syndrome" (47%) and senile dementia (30%); 44% had arthritis/rheumatism. Half of the patients showed severe cognitive impairment; only 12% showed no cognitive impairment. Sixty-three percent were totally dependent; 68% used wheelchairs, 61% were chairbound; 50% had impairments in vision, one-third in hearing, and 14% in speech. Normal bladder capacity, absence of detrusor instability, and satisfactory bladder emptying, as evidenced by low residual urines, was found in 41% of the patients, suggesting that incontinence in this elderly group may not be a primary bladder problem, but rather that mental and physical disabilities may be a more important underlying cause of incontinence in these patients. An important finding in this study is that 34% of the patients had detrusor instability. It is theoretically possible that pharmacologic therapy with anticholinergic agents or imipramine could improve incontinence in this group. Five percent were found to have large residual urine volumes in association with high-capacity bladders suggesting overflow incontinence as the cause of their daily leakage. Pelvic relaxation and stress leakage was far less common in this elderly group of nursing home patients than in young and middle-aged women.
Comment in
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Urodynamics.J Am Geriatr Soc. 1991 Jan;39(1):105-7. doi: 10.1111/j.1532-5415.1991.tb05919.x. J Am Geriatr Soc. 1991. PMID: 1898954 No abstract available.
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