Treatment Overview
Several types of behavioral methods are used
for treating
urinary incontinence: bladder training, habit
training, biofeedback, and
pelvic muscle exercises. Men who have incontinence due
to physical or mental limitations (functional incontinence) can try
timed voiding and prompted voiding.
Bladder training
Bladder training (also called bladder retraining)
is used to treat
urge incontinence. Bladder training attempts to
increase how long you can wait before having to urinate. A doctor will teach a
person about the structure of the lower urinary tract and the causes of
incontinence.
A voiding schedule is first established. Then you
are trained to resist the first urge to urinate and refrain from urinating
until the scheduled time. The intervals between scheduled bathroom visits are
increased until you can refrain from urinating for several hours.
Biofeedback
Biofeedback is
a technique for learning to control a body function that is not normally under
conscious control, such as skin temperature, muscle tension, heart rate, or
blood pressure.
Men with incontinence are taught bladder-sphincter
biofeedback methods along with pelvic floor exercises. These techniques record
bladder, rectal sphincter, and abdominal pressures as well as electrical
activity. As the information is recorded, it is displayed for you. By watching
the information, you learn to relax your bladder and abdominal muscles and
contract your pelvic floor muscles based on the information displayed.
Learning biofeedback requires practice in a lab or other setting under
the guidance of a trained therapist. Home biofeedback units also are
available.
Pelvic floor muscle training
Pelvic floor (Kegel) exercises can help strengthen
some of the muscles that control the flow of urine and are used to treat urge
or stress incontinence. Kegel exercises are done as follows:
- The muscles to be exercised are the pelvic
muscles. These can be felt by purposely stopping the flow of urine in midstream
and starting again. The muscles that squeeze the urethra and anus are the ones
involved.
- Remembering what it felt like to control these muscles
during urination, try to contract them when not urinating. If the stomach or
buttocks muscles tighten, the muscles are not being exercised correctly.
- Tighten these muscles for 3 seconds and then relax for 3 seconds.
- The exercises should be repeated 10 to 15 times per session. Do at
least 3 sessions a day.
Kegel exercises can be done when you are at home or away
from home, and at any time during the day. No one will be aware that you are
doing the exercises, so you can do them often, no matter where you are.
Kegel exercises are often combined with biofeedback techniques to teach
the proper exercise methods and to make sure the exercise is working. To be
effective, pelvic floor (Kegel) exercises with or without biofeedback
techniques require a high level of motivation and frequent repetition.
What To Expect After Treatment
See the How Well It Works section
below.
Why It Is Done
Behavioral methods may be used to
treat urinary incontinence.
How Well It Works
Bladder training
There hasn't been a lot of research on bladder
training for men who have incontinence problems, but bladder training may be
able to help. And trying it poses no risks. Most people who use bladder
training have fewer symptoms of incontinence. Some people completely eliminate
their incontinence.1
Biofeedback
Again, there is not a lot of evidence
for biofeedback combined with other behavioral therapies in men. More research
is needed.
Pelvic floor muscle training
Two reviews of men using pelvic floor muscle
training to improve continence after surgery on the prostate gave different
results. One review showed that pelvic floor muscle training did help men
control leakage of urine after a radical prostatectomy for prostate
cancer.2 But another review showed no benefit overall
in men trying pelvic floor muscle training after any prostate surgery.3
Risks
There are no risks associated with this
treatment.
What To Think About
Behavioral methods require a high
level of motivation.
To be successful, prompted voiding requires
a committed caregiver.
To be effective, pelvic floor (Kegel)
exercises with or without biofeedback techniques require a high level of
motivation and frequent repetition.
Complete the special treatment information form (PDF)
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to help you understand this treatment.