Articles
Urinary incontinence surgery in women: The next step
Content
Things to consider
Understand the risks
Sling procedures to treat stress incontinence
Suspension procedures to treat stress incontinence
Nerve stimulation to treat overactive bladder
One step at a time
Things to consider
Before you choose urinary incontinence surgery:
- Get an accurate diagnosis. Different types of incontinence require different surgical approaches. Your doctor might refer you to an incontinence specialist, urologist or urogynecologist for further diagnostic testing.
- Think about your plans for having children. Your doctor might recommend waiting for surgery until you're finished with childbearing. The strain of pregnancy and delivery on your bladder, urethra and supportive tissues might undo the benefits of a surgical fix.
- Understand that surgery only corrects the problem it's designed to treat. Surgery doesn't cure all urinary incontinence. For instance, if you have mixed incontinence — a combination of stress incontinence and overactive bladder — surgery might improve your stress incontinence but not your overactive bladder. You might still need medication and physical therapy after surgery to treat overactive bladder.