Your doctor is likely to recommend a combination of treatment strategies to alleviate your symptoms.
Behavioral interventions
Behavioral interventions are the first line in helping you manage your overactive bladder. If you experience urge incontinence, these interventions alone aren't likely to result in complete dryness, but they may significantly reduce the number of incontinence episodes. The interventions your doctor recommends may cover the following areas:
- Fluid consumption. Your doctor may recommend the amount and timing of your fluid consumption.
- Bladder training. Occasionally, your doctor may recommend a strategy to train yourself to delay voiding when you feel an urge to urinate. You'll begin with very small delays, such as 10 minutes, and gradually work your way up to urinating every three to five hours.
- Double voiding. Some people have problems with emptying their bladders. This is diagnosed by significant elevations of residual urine volumes and may be helped by double voiding. After urinating, you wait a few minutes and then try again to empty your bladder completely. Your doctor can tell you if this might help.
- Scheduled toilet trips. Your doctor may recommend a schedule for toileting so that you urinate at the same times every day — every two to four hours as recommended — rather than when you feel the urge to urinate.
- Pelvic floor muscle exercises. Exercises called Kegel exercises strengthen your pelvic floor muscles and urinary sphincter — muscles that are critical for holding urine even if your bladder muscles involuntarily contract. These strengthened muscles are then contracted when you feel urge so that you can successfully suppress the bladder's involuntary contractions. Your doctor or a physical therapist can help you learn how to do Kegel exercises correctly. It may take as long as six to eight weeks before you notice a difference in your symptoms.
- Intermittent catheterization. You can learn how to empty your bladder by passing a catheter periodically to empty it completely. Using a catheter simply helps the bladder do what it can't do itself. Your doctor can tell you if this is right for you.
- Absorbent pads. You can wear absorbent pads or undergarments to protect your clothing and avoid embarrassing incidents if you do experience incontinence. In addition, the use of pads means that you won't have to limit your activities due to your symptoms.
Medications
Medications that relax the bladder can be effective for alleviating symptoms of overactive bladder and reducing episodes of urge incontinence. These drugs include tolterodine (Detrol), oxybutynin (Ditropan), an oxybutynin skin patch (Oxytrol), trospium (Sanctura), solifenacin (Vesicare) and darifenacin (Enablex). These medications are usually used in combination with behavioral interventions.
Common side effects of these drugs include dry eyes and dry mouth, but drinking water to quench thirst can aggravate symptoms of overactive bladder. Extended-release forms of these medications, including the skin patch, may cause fewer side effects.
Your doctor may recommend that you suck on a piece of sugar-free candy or chew sugar-free gum to alleviate dry mouth, and use eyedrops to keep your eyes moist. Over-the-counter preparations, such as Biotene products, can be helpful for chronically dry mouth.
OnabotulinumtoxinA
This medication is a protein from the bacteria that cause botulism illness. However, in small doses directly injected into tissues, this protein paralyzes muscles, and research has indicated that it may be useful for severe urge incontinence. But, it's not approved by the Food and Drug Administration for this purpose, and the effects are temporary, lasting only about six months. Additionally, onabotulinumtoxinA carries a risk of worsening bladder emptying in older adults and people already weakened by other health problems.
Sacral nerve stimulation
The sacral nerves carrying signals between the spinal cord and nerves in the bladder's tissues. Modulation of these nerve impulses can improve overactive bladder symptoms. In this procedure, a thin wire is placed close to the sacral nerves where they pass near your tailbone. Your doctor then uses a device connected to the wire to deliver electrical impulses to your bladder, similar to what a pacemaker does for the heart. If successful at reducing your symptoms, the wire is eventually connected to a small battery device that's placed under your skin.
Surgery
Surgery to treat overactive bladder is reserved for people with severe symptoms who don't respond to other treatments. The goal is to improve the bladder's storing ability and reduce pressure in the bladder. However, these procedures won't help relieve any bladder pain you might be experiencing. Interventions include:
- Surgery to increase bladder capacity. This major surgical procedure uses pieces of your bowel to replace a portion of your bladder. If you undergo this procedure, you may need to use a catheter intermittently for the rest of your life to empty your bladder. Because this is a major surgical procedure with the potential for serious side effects, this surgery is reserved for people with severe overactive bladder that hasn't improved despite other treatments.
- Bladder removal. This procedure is used as a last resort and involves removing the bladder and surgically constructing a replacement or an opening in the body (stoma) to attach a bag on the skin to collect urine.
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