Bladder Control
Most people with incontinence suffer social embarrassment. Many become depressed
and limit their activities away from home, often becoming socially isolated
and lonely.
Physical conditions linked to Bladder Control include infection, falls, fractures,
and sleep disorders.
Many people with incontinence are too embarrassed to talk to their health care
provider about it. They "cope" or "just learn to live with it."
This is changing gradually as people realize that help is available.
Approximately 15-30% of elderly people who live at home are affected by urinary
incontinence. Another 40% of elderly persons who live in nursing homes are affected.
Incontinence is a major reason for people going into nursing homes. However,
it is not an inevitable consequence of aging.
Bladder Control brief description of the urinary system and the process of
urination (micturition):
The urinary system is composed of the kidneys, ureters, bladder, and urethra.
The kidneys filter water and waste from the blood. They excrete urine, which
passes via the ureters to the bladder. The bladder stores urine until you urinate.
The kidneys typically excrete about 1 to 1-1/2 quarts (1000-1500 mL) of urine
in 24 hours.
The bladder is a hollow, muscular organ. The bladder wall includes a smooth
muscle known as the detrusor muscle. The bladder’s size, shape, position, and
relation to other organs vary with age and the amount of urine stored.
The urethra is a narrow tube connecting the bladder with the opening when the
urine comes out of the body. Surrounding the urethra are sphincter muscles,
which partly control release of urine from the bladder and from the body.
You can stop or hold off urination by contracting (squeezing) the external
sphincter, which causes relaxation of the detrusor. Urine is stored, and the
urge to urinate is temporarily stopped.
Incontinence affects both sexes and all ages but is most common in older people.
Incontinence is much more common in women than in men. Most men with incontinence
are older and suffer from some type of prostate disease. The good news about
urinary incontinence is that it is treatable. A great majority of people with
Bladder Control problems can be helped by treatments that are available now.
See our Incontinence Products
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