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Home > About Urinary Incontinence
About Urinary Incontinence
Urinary incontinence is an inability to hold urine until you get to a toilet. More than 13 million people in the United States - including one in four women - experience incontinence. It is often temporary, and it always results from an underlying health condition. There are different types of urinary incontinence:
Stress incontinence
Leakage of small amounts of urine during physical movement (coughing, sneezing, exercising)
Urge incontinence
Leakage of large amounts of urine at unexpected times, including during sleep
Functional incontinence
Untimely urination because of physical disability, external obstacles, or problems in thinking or communicating that prevent a person from reaching a toilet
Overflow incontinence
Unexpected leakage of small amounts of urine because of a full bladder
Mixed incontinence
Usually the occurrence of stress and urge incontinence together
Transient incontinence
Leakage that occurs temporarily because of a condition that will pass (infection, medication)
Learn more about urinary incontinence at these websites:
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