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HealthInfo Aoraki South Canterbury

Bladder control problems (urinary incontinence)

Mate tōngāmimi

Illustration showing where the pelvic floor muscles are in a male and a femaleUrinary incontinence is when you have lost bladder control, so you leak wee (urine).

Urinary incontinence can range from occasionally leaking a few drops to leaking enough to affect your daily activities.

Types of urinary incontinence include:

You may have more than one type. For example, you might have both stress and urge incontinence.

Causes of urinary incontinence

Stress incontinence

Stress incontinence is caused by damage to your pelvic floor muscles, ligaments and tissues. It can be due to:

Urge incontinence

Urge incontinence is caused by overactivity of your bladder muscles, which may be due to:

Overflow incontinence

Overflow incontinence happens when your bladder does not empty completely. This can be due an obstruction affecting the urine flow such as:

Continuous incontinence

Continuous incontinence can be caused by:

Treating urinary incontinence with non-surgical methods

Non-surgical treatment for urinary incontinence includes lifestyle changes, pelvic floor muscle training, bladder retraining and medication.

Lifestyle changes

Pelvic floor muscle training

Pelvic floor exercises can help you retrain and strengthen weak or damaged pelvic floor muscles.

Bladder retraining

Bladder retraining aims to:

Medication

If your symptoms continue, medications may help treat your bladder control problems. The medications aim to reduce your urge to wee (urinate) as well as how often you wee.

Common medications for bladder control problems are oxybutynin and solifenacin. Other medications include alpha-1 blockers (doxazosin, tamsulosin and finasteride) for men with enlarged prostates and vaginal estrogen for post-menopausal women.

Review all your medications with your general practice team or pharmacist. Some medications can make incontinence worse and there may be alternatives.

Treating urinary incontinence with surgical methods

If non-surgical treatments do not help, your general practice team may refer you to the hospital to see a specialist.

The specialist may consider Botox treatment. There are also several types of surgery that might help treat bladder control problems. For information on Botox treatment and surgery for bladder control problems, see Urinary incontinence surgery and procedures from the United Kingdom's NHS.

The Te Whatu Ora page Patient decision guides gives you information about options for treating stress urinary incontinence.

  HealthInfo recommends the following pages

Written by HealthInfo clinical advisers. Last reviewed April 2023.

Sources

See also:

Bedwetting & daytime wetting in children

Page reference: 264391

Review key: HIURS-53047