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10 May 2004
Sex An Issue For Overactive Bladder Sufferers

Women who experience overactive bladder are less likely to enjoy sexual activity, according to a study from the University of Pittsburgh. Overactive bladder - a condition where the muscle surrounding the bladder contracts spastically causing frequent urination and incontinence - affects more than 8 million women globally. Results of the study were presented at the annual meeting of the American Urological Association (AUA). In the study, 78 women diagnosed with overactive bladder completed two questionnaires: one that evaluated the presence and degree of bother caused by their symptoms of overactive bladder; and one that evaluated the patient's sexual function.

By comparing answers on both questionnaires, the researchers found that women who expressed a higher degree of bother as a result of urge urinary incontinence were less likely to enjoy sexual activity and less sexually active. Those who experienced a significant amount of genital or abdominal pain were less likely to enjoy sexual activity, but were more likely to experience sexual thoughts or fantasies.

"Overactive bladder is so prevalent, and, as shown by this study, its effects reach beyond the commonly thought of symptoms like incontinence to the inability to enjoy sexual activity," said Michael Chancellor, senior author of the study. "There is still a stigma about talking to a doctor about overactive bladder. Women need to know that they don't have to accept the symptoms of overactive bladder and that there are treatments that can ease their symptoms."

More than 17 million Americans, half of whom are women, suffer from overactive bladder, a condition that significantly affects the quality of life. An estimated 80 percent of these patients do not seek help or treatment for this condition. Overactive bladder is characterized by:

  • frequency - urinating more than eight times in a 24 hour period;
  • urgency - the immediate and strong urge to urinate; and urge incontinence -
  • the inability to suppress urgency, resulting in the leaking or loss of urine.


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