Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Weight Loss for Urinary Incontinence

Urinary incontinence affects millions of women and has a profound adverse effect on quality of life. Overweight and obesity are well known to make symptoms of incontinence worse and there is preliminary evidence suggesting that weight loss has a beneficial effect on symptoms in overweight and obese women.

Last week the N Engl J Med published the results of the PRIDE study (Program to Reduce Incontinence by Diet and Exercise), a large randomized trial in 338 overweight and obese women with at least 10 urinary-incontinence episodes per week. Patients were randomized to an intensive 6-month weight-loss program that included diet, exercise, and behavior modification (226 patients) or to a structured education program (112 patients).

The average age of the patients was around 53 years, the average BMI was 36; the weekly number of incontinence episodes was around 24/week. After six months, women in the intervention group had a mean weight loss of 8.0% (7.8 kg), as compared with 1.6% (1.5 kg) in the control group. The number of incontinence episodes decreased by 47% in the intervention group, as compared with 28% in the control group. The reduction was mainly seen in the frequency of stress-incontinence, but not of urge-incontinence episodes.

These findings suggest that urinary incontinence should be added to the long list of health problems that improve with moderate weight loss.

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2 Responses to “Weight Loss for Urinary Incontinence”

  1. Jack Reid says:

    This is a big issue. I know it was diffuct for my family when my mom became had a bed wetting problem

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  2. Katie says:

    I sencond that

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In The News

Weight stigma can itself increase weight gain: study

Jan. 26, 2012 Montreal Gazette – Dr. Arya Sharma, scientific director of the Canadian Obesity Network, says it's clear Western culture needs to stop stigmatizing weight gain and start understanding what causes it. "If we don't stop looking at obesity as a character flaw instead of a complex health condition, then we won't be addressing the underlying issues. Shaming, blaming and taxing aren't constructive or positive strategies." Read the article

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