Stress incontinence is leakage of urine during physical activities, such as exercise, coughing, sneezing, laughing, lifting, or sex. It is a common problem for women.
The pelvic floor muscles normally fit snugly around the neck of the bladder. They form a ring of muscle that prevents urine from escaping through the urethra. The urethra is the tube that carries urine out of the bladder. The pelvic floor muscles can be stretched or torn during childbearing. After menopause there may be further loss of muscle tone because the lack of estrogen causes a thinning of tissues. Sudden pressure on the bladder (for example, from coughing or sneezing) can overcome the weakened muscles and cause some urine to escape.
A less common cause is pelvic surgery, which can either weaken pelvic muscles or damage pelvic nerves.
Symptoms include leakage of urine during lifting or other physical activity, laughing, coughing, or sneezing.
Your healthcare provider will ask about your symptoms and medical history and examine you. Samples of your blood and urine will be tested. You may be referred to a specialist, such as a urologist or gynecologist, for further investigation and treatment. (A urologist is a healthcare provider who specializes in disorders of the urinary tract in both men and women and in the reproductive tract of men. A gynecologist specializes in women's healthcare and especially in disorders of the reproductive tract of women.)
Weak pelvic floor muscles can often be strengthened by Kegel exercises. You can feel the muscles to use by squeezing the muscles in your genital area, for example, when you stop the flow of urine or try to stop from passing gas. To do Kegel exercises:
You can do Kegel exercises anywhere: while sitting at a desk, waiting for a bus, washing dishes, driving a car, waiting in line, or watching television. No one will know you are doing them.
You may see a change for the better after doing the Kegels for just a few weeks. However, you may not notice a lot of improvement until after 3 to 6 months of daily exercises. You should keep doing Kegels every day to keep the pelvic muscles strong.
Women may want to ask their healthcare provider about cones that may be used to help strengthen the pelvic floor muscles. The cones range in size. You may start with a large cone. You put it into your vagina and try to hold it in place for 15 minutes a couple of times a day. When this is easy for you to do, you may then try keeping a smaller cone in place.
Some medicines can help tighten the ring of muscles that control release of urine.
When symptoms are severe and attempts to strengthen these tissues with exercise or other medical treatments have not succeeded, surgery may be done to provide support to the bladder and the pelvic muscles.