Surgery
If your
urinary incontinence has not improved after trying
behavioral methods and medicine and your health
professional feels surgery will be an effective treatment, you may choose to
have surgery rather than live with your symptoms. In some cases, such as when a
bladder outlet obstruction is affecting kidney function, surgery may be the
only way to treat the problem that is causing the incontinence.
Surgery may be appropriate for men who:
- Have ongoing (chronic)
incontinence.
- Have severe symptoms and total
incontinence.
- Are extremely bothered by their
symptoms.
- Have problems with urinary retention.
- Have
moderate to severe recurrent bleeding.
- Have recurrent
urinary tract infections.
Overflow incontinence caused by enlargement of the
prostate (benign prostatic hyperplasia, or BPH) is the form of
incontinence most often treated with surgery. For more information, see the
topic
Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia (BPH).
Stress incontinence caused by removal of the prostate
gland because of
prostate cancer or an
enlarged prostate may also be treated with surgery, if
the incontinence isn't cured after a period of watchful waiting. Surgery for an
enlarged prostate (BPH) can interfere with or damage the structures involved in
holding urine, leading to incontinence.
Surgery Choices
If overflow incontinence is caused by benign prostatic
hyperplasia (BPH), prostate surgery may relieve the incontinence. For more
information about surgery options and treatment for BPH, see the topic
Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia (BPH).
Surgery for severe stress incontinence that does not improve with
behavioral methods includes:
- Artificial sphincter, which is a device
made of silicone rubber that fits around the urethra (the tube that carries
urine from your bladder to the outside of your body) and can be inflated or
deflated to control urination.
- Urethral
bulking, which involves injecting material around the urethra to control
urination by either closing a hole in the urethra or building up the thickness
of the wall of the urethra.
A new procedure called the bulbourethral sling is being studied
as a treatment for urinary incontinence that results from prostate surgery. In
this procedure, a sling is placed beneath the
urethra to support it and is attached to either muscle
tissue or the pubic bone. The sling compresses and elevates the urethra, giving
the urethra greater resistance to pressure from the abdomen. Early studies
indicate that this procedure may show promise in the treatment of urinary
incontinence, but further study is necessary to determine its long-term
effectiveness.
What To Think About
Surgery is usually not considered for urinary incontinence unless
it is the only reasonable way to cure it or until after attempts to treat the
problem with conservative measures or other treatment have failed. The decision
to have surgery must always be based on an accurate diagnosis and realistic
expectations for the surgery.
Most surgical failures are due to incorrect diagnoses. Other
reasons for failure include healing problems, additional causes of incontinence
that aren't apparent before the surgery, and a lack of experience or skill on
the part of the surgeon performing the procedure.
Factors that increase the chances that surgical treatment will
fail to correct incontinence include
obesity, long-term (chronic) cough,
radiation therapy, age, poor nutrition, and strenuous
physical activity.