Incontinence products from Keys DryForLife range - Call for discreet advice on incontinence management

Archive for May, 2010

Urge Incontinence in Women Increases the Chance of Injury

Thursday, May 27th, 2010

With age comes wisdom and also comes an increased chance of injury. The chance of developing urinary incontinence increases as a women crests sixty. Urge incontinence, in particular, will occur in up to 40% of women in this age group. Since urge incontinence in women manifests itself as a sudden spasm of the bladder accompanied by an urgent need to urinate, it is credited with increasing the incidence of falls resulting in injury in this same segment of the population.

Falling is problematic in the elderly anyway. Add to this predisposition for injury an affliction whose symptoms causes a woman to rush to the bathroom to avoid having an accident, and you have a recipe for disaster. By the age of 65 every third woman can expect some sort of injury from a fall. The most prevalent cause of hospital trauma admissions, fracturing a bone in a fall, is frequently the beginning of the end for an older woman. This one mishap can change their lives permanently. Consider an older woman falling and fracturing her hip, preventing her from being able to live on her own ever again.

When you consider the symptoms of urge incontinence in this light, these symptoms take on an ominous tone. An overpowering urgency to get to the restroom to avoid having an accident can lead to a careless and life changing accident when urgency overrides safety. This hurried compulsion to get to the bathroom immediately opens an older woman up for slipping, tripping and falling, especially when rushing to the bathroom at night. Over half of these treacherous falls happen in the safety of a woman’s own home.

By identifying the cause of the urge incontinence and remedying the situation, there is a good chance that a woman can avoid falling and suffering a debilitating fracture. Unfortunately many women do not discuss their incontinence problems with their doctor, so they never even seek treatment. Sometimes embarrassment is the cause for this omission, and other times an older woman simply assumes that the incontinence is just a normal side effect of ageing and nothing can be done about it. Depending on the cause of urge incontinence in women there are a number of different ways to go about treating it ranging from biofeedback to medication to surgery.

In studies that measure the relationship between the increase in harmful falls among women suffering from incontinence versus women who are not suffering from incontinence, the former group were about 25% more likely to take a spill. Urge incontinence poses the greatest risk for an elderly woman falling, while there was not increased risk for women suffering from stress incontinence. Of the group of women that do take a tumble, about a third of them will suffer a fracture.

Falling is already a serious health issue for elderly women, and urge incontinence in women just exacerbates the situation. So if you or a loved one over the age of 65 are suffering from urge incontinence marked by a sudden and urgent need to urinate, discuss the problem with your doctor, and together you can come up with a cure or a safe management solution for your problem. Using good quality incontinence products or adding a bedside commode next to the bed can help mitigate the chances of falling and sustaining serious injury. Removing the urgency from urge incontinence, helps keep elderly women healthy and safe even if the situation is chronic.

Further Urge Incontinence Articles

Disposable Incontinence Products Help with Odour Issues

Sunday, May 23rd, 2010

If you are managing an adult incontinence condition, you are all too well aware of the problems of staying comfortable and dry. You may also find that while reusable, washable incontinence products are generally a little easier on the pocketbook, disposable incontinence products frequently work better for managing dryness. The convenience of being able to swap out a soiled incontinence pad for a new one is much quicker and easier than removing and replacing soiled pants.

Being able to refresh yourself quickly with a minimum of fuss helps you to stay mobile and active. One of the sad, side effects of adult incontinence is that it tends to isolate a person from their friends and even family. Fears of having a public accident or embarrassing odour can cause a person to purposely withdraw from social activities that they once loved. While you cannot make your incontinence problem go away, you can do the next best thing, and that is to manage it.

By trying many different incontinence products you can determine which ones work best for you. If you live an active lifestyle, you will very likely use several different types of products depending on your activity. For example, you may choose to wear a washable incontinence pant for a workout at the gym, because you will be washing all of your workout clothes anyway. Then you may prefer a disposable incontinence pad for your day at work for quick and easy cleanup.

While you can find hygiene sprays to help with odour control, you can also help the situation by naturally reducing the amount of odour in your urine, and here are some ideas that may help. Always start with a thorough physical examination, which will make sure that you do not have any infection building in your bladder causing an unpleasant odour in the urine. Then be aware of what you are eating, because many foods like coffee, tuna fish, asparagus, onions or garlic can pass their unique scent on to your urine. Oftentimes when a person suffers from incontinence they tend to limit their fluid intake hoping to curtail their fluid output, however you always want to make sure that you drink plenty of fluids. By staying properly hydrated you keep your urine from becoming too concentrated, which also helps manage odour. Then there are foods like cranberry juice, which increase the acidity of the urine helping to reduce any odour naturally.

So as you are managing your incontinence problem, you can set yourself up to stay engaged and active without having to worry about embarrassing odour or accidents. Using reusable and disposable incontinence products that help to contain leakage, keep skin dry and have odour control helps you to carry on as usual. Incontinence products that keep any odour from forming coupled with managing your diet can really help you to continue living as you did before your incontinence problems began. At DryForLife we are happy to supply you with a sample pack of products for you to try for free, so that you can find the products that best work for you and your lifestyle.

Further Incontinence Products Articles

What is Urge Incontinence?

Sunday, May 23rd, 2010

One of the most prevalent types of urinary incontinence in older adults is urge incontinence,. So it is important to understand what is urge incontinence. You may also hear this type of incontinence called a spastic or overactive bladder, because it is caused by abnormal bladder spasms or contractions. It manifests itself as a very sudden and strong ‘urge’ to urinate. While the involuntary loss of urine may seem like a disease unto itself, it is actually a harbinger of an underlying problem, and as such it should not be ignored.

When you notice the symptoms of urge incontinence beginning, you will want to let your doctor know, and he or she can help you to determine the source of the problem. There are many different things that can cause urge incontinence, so it is a good idea to have a medical professional evaluate your individual problem. When you suffer from urge incontinence the spasms in the bladder cause such a sudden and violent contraction, that urine is forced through the strong sphincter muscles normally charged with regulating the flow of urine.

The key then, is to find out why the contraction occurs in the first place. There are many different reasons why the bladder may experience sudden and strong contractions, and this is why it is important to discuss your problem with a medical health professional. Your doctor can determine if some sort of nerve damage has occurred possibly as a result of disease or injury. By the same token, this condition can occur as a result of damage to the spinal cord.

Despite best efforts, there are many times when the exact cause cannot be found even though a trigger is found like the bladder may be stimulated into contracting at the sound of running water. However, even if you do not find the exact cause of your urge incontinence, it is important to rule out some major diseases as the cause.

The symptoms for urge incontinence are pretty straight forward. Accompanied by an involuntary urine leakage, you are constantly feeling the urge to urinate. The leakage happens both during the day and at night, and in some cases the problem can be cured while in other cases it simply needs to be managed.

Urge incontinence is generally treated with behavior modification, medication or surgery depending on the underlying cause of the condition. So now that you have answered the question, what is urge incontinence, you can work with your medical professional to manage your particular situation in the best way possible. At DryForLife we have been helping our customers deal with their incontinence challenges for over forty years, and now we are ready to help you.

Further Urge Incontinence Articles

Waterproof Mattress Protection Help Manage Nocturnal Enuresis

Sunday, May 16th, 2010

Sometimes nocturnal enuresis, or bedwetting, does not go away. The problem is never solved, and the exact cause is never identified. When this happens, at some point a person accepts the possibility of forever while continuing to hope for a cure. When a child is still young they do not grasp the social stigma that accompanies wearing a diaper to bed, but by the time they are a young teen, they are all too aware of the embarrassment of the situation and the need for some sort or waterproof mattress protection.

It is interesting that humans are not ashamed to wear glasses or hearing aids, but wearing a diaper to bed is something to be pitied or, worse yet, ridiculed. In very young children bedwetting is extremely common, and every child develops at their own rate when it comes to just about everything including walking, talking and continence. Because toilet training usually happens at such an early age, we naturally relate the need for bedwetting protection to very small children or babies.

However, for some people, bedwetting remains an issue for their entire lives. It is not a choice; it is a symptom, even when the underlying cause remains a mystery. If parents try everything that their doctor recommends, and still their child continues to have bedwetting problems, then it is simply a practical decision for them to use some sort or waterproof mattress protection. Whether it is having the child continue to wear a diaper or using protective mattress covers or both, at some point the issue begins to take on the mantle of maintenance rather that of a cure.

After putting a child through all of the treatments and cures to help curtail bedwetting like alarms, limiting fluid intake and various medications, when nothing is working, there is a point where learning to live with this condition is far preferable to waking up every morning drenched from a nocturnal accident. While bedwetting is generally accepted behavior for the very young or the very old, there are also certain conditions that cause otherwise healthy children to battle nocturnal enuresis. For some people, it simply becomes a disease that has to be managed like any other physical impairment.

Nocturnal enuresis is a health problem, and it cannot always be cured. Sometimes it simply must be managed, and that is when the need for quality incontinence care products becomes important. Whether it is waterproof mattress protection, pants or pads, having the right incontinence products can help to take some of the stress out of dealing with this problem. At DryForLife we have been helping our customers successfully deal with incontinence issues for over forty years.

Further Incontinence Products Articles

Incontinence Underwear for Men Help when Recovering from Prostate Surgery

Saturday, May 15th, 2010

Urinary incontinence in men can be caused by a number of different factors, and the likelihood of incontinence increases as a man ages. One of the things that happens as a man ages is that his prostate begins to enlarge, and it may require that he use incontinence underwear for men for a time to help manage his situation. As the prostate becomes enlarged it interferes with the proper functioning of the urinary tract, and that is how the prostate contributes to men’s incontinence.

The prostate is about the size and shape of a walnut, and it is sandwiched in between the penis and the bladder with the urethra running right through it. The urethra is the tube that carries urine from the bladder out of the body. During a man’s reproductive process the prostate releases a fluid that is nourishing and protective to sperm. Around the age of 50 most men’s prostate glands begin to enlarge causing a condition known as benign prostatic hypertrophy (BPH), which manifests itself as difficulty urinating.

To treat an enlarged prostate medication or surgery are the normal course of treatment. Alpha-blockers, which relax the muscles around the urethra, help to allow the urine to pass freely through the urethra. Another medication, which is sometimes used to treat this condition, is 5-alpha-reductase inhibitors, which reduce DHT, a type of testosterone, causing the prostate to shrink relieving pressure on the urethra. If medication does not solve the problem, then some men may need surgery to improve their symptoms, however one of the risks of surgery is that a man may be left dealing with urinary incontinence.

Another problem that can occur with the prostate is cancer. Prostate cancer is the second most common form of cancer found in men, next to skin cancer, and it is highly treatable using chemotherapy, radiation and surgery. Surgery for prostate cancer is called a prostatectomy, which removes the entire prostate with the hopes of removing all of the cancer cells with it. When radiation is warranted, it kills all of the cancer cells in the prostate and minimizes damage to surrounding healthy cells. Other solutions that attempt to kill cancer cells and minimize damage to healthy cells are radioactive seed implants, chemotherapy, cryotherapy, hormone therapy and various clinical trials.

Unfortunately all of these treatments have the risk of urinary incontinence for at least several months after the treatment has ended. However, in the grand scheme of things, if you have cancer, it is much better to be cancer free and deal with the inconvenience of incontinence for a time than the alternative. There are many different incontinence products that are available to help manage your incontinence symptoms as you find your way back to good health including incontinence underwear for men and protective mattress covers. At DryForLife we are happy to discreetly answer any questions that you may have regarding the best products to help manage your situation.

Further Incontinence Articles

More About Mens Incontinence

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

Urinary incontinence happens in both men and women, and it becomes increasingly common with advancing age. Incontinence itself, which is the accidental release of urine, is not a disease. Rather it is a symptom, and the problems that cause mens incontinence can be very different than the causes for women.

Since the urinary tract is very different for a man than it is for a woman, it only makes sense that many of the causes for incontinence would be different as well. The form and function of the bladder is essentially the same for a woman and a man, however the urethra, which is the tube that leads from the bladder, down through the prostate gland, traveling through the penis and finally reaching the outside of the body, is where there are distinct anatomical differences.

Generally any problem with the bladder itself is largely the same between the sexes. For example, when the bladder contracts prematurely or too forcefully; if surrounding muscles are weak or injured; or if the bladder does not empty completely incontinence can occur, and these same problems may happen to women and men. However, as problems move to the the area of the urethra, these incontinence issues become more gender specific.

While urinary incontinence is certainly more commonly found in older men, it is not necessarily restricted to older men. Incontinence can be a chronic problem, or it can be a short lived problem, and there are several different types of incontinence. Stress incontinence generally happens when you put pressure on your bladder such as with a cough or sneeze. Urge incontinence happens when the bladder prematurely contracts not leaving time to reach the bathroom. Overflow incontinence happens when bladder muscles are weak so that the bladder does not fully empty. This problem can be exacerbated by an enlarged prostate that then partially blocks the urethra.

Most often the symptoms of urinary incontinence manifest themselves as urine leaking from the bladder, but they can differ slightly depending on the incontinence’s cause. With stress incontinence this leak can occur when you strain to lift a heavy object or simply sneeze. With urge incontinence, you experience the sudden urge to urinate, and you cannot reach a toilet in time. With overflow incontinence you always feel like you need to go to the bathroom, but when you go only a small amount of urine is released and continues to dribble.

Your health care professional can help determine the cause of mens incontinence, and as you are working through your treatments, it is important to use quality incontinence products. At DryForLife we are ready to assist with answers to your questions, and we can provide you with the best mix of incontinence management products to support your lifestyle.

Further Incontinence Articles

The Need for Adult Incontinent Pants and Pads with a Spinal Cord Injury

Saturday, May 8th, 2010

Whether or not you realize it, your spinal cord plays a big part in how well your bladder works. There are nerves which are located almost at the end of the spinal cord that control they workings of the urinary system. When there is an injury to the spinal cord, the kidneys are usually not affected, but the coordination of the sphincter muscles and the bladder are almost always affected, which means that the injured person not only has to deal with their spinal cord injury, but they have to manage incontinence as well. Fortunately there are many quality products on the market to help manage this condition like adult incontinent pants and pads.

After sustaining a spinal cord injury, there can be an interruption between the brain and the bladder, which may keep a person from feeling a full bladder or sensing that they need to urinate. There is a delicate dance that happens between the nerve endings in the spinal cord, the sphincter muscle and the bladder, and when the spinal cord sustains an injury the delicate balance is disrupted frequently causing adult incontinence.

Just about any spinal cord injury manifests itself in some sort of bladder control problem. There are basically two different ways that the bladder can function after a spinal cord injury, and that is reflex or non-reflex. Reflex bladder or spastic bladder happens when your bladder automatically empties when it is full. As you can imagine, if you are not getting to choose when to empty your bladder, having a full bladder empty reflexively can be a huge problem. The most common way to deal with this problem is through the use of a Foley catheter. The other type of bladder problem is a non-reflex bladder or flaccid bladder, which happens when there is no reflex in the bladder muscle. The person may not even be able to feel when their bladder is full, and there is a danger of over stretching the bladder causing urine to back up into the kidneys. Over stretching the bladder muscle will eventually damage the it. This problem is also managed with a Foley catheter by not allowing the bladder to overfill.

There are many issues to manage with a spinal cord injury, and incontinence is just one of them. With high quality adult incontinent pants and pads, it makes the process of dealing with these many different issues more tolerable. Look to your health care professional to help you find the best way to manage your personal situation.

Further Adult Incontinence Articles

Successfully Dealing with Eneuresis

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

Once a child is old enough to be toilet trained, if they are still unable to control their bladder the condition is known as enuresis. Less than three percent of children have a physical cause contributing to enuresis, which means that the condition is largely behavioral. Enuresis is also commonly referred to as bedwetting, and there are many different factors that can contribute to the condition.

If your family has a history of bedwetting then it should not be a surprise if at least one of your children also has a challenge with enuresis. The effect of genetics on enuresis can also appear as delayed maturation, where bladder muscles are not yet fully developed and coordinated. This condition is also likely to occur if your child has a small bladder capacity or if they are an extremely sound sleeper. Another sleep related condition that can contribute to enuresis is sleep apnea, which decreases oxygen levels in the blood making a child’s body less likely to respond to the signals when it is time to urinate.

Physical problems that can contribute to a child’s bedwetting can include a urinary tract infection or bladder irritation from chronic constipation. Some children’s bodies produce a high volume of urine during the night making it more likely that they will have a toileting accident in their sleep.

There are also outside factors that can have a huge effect on a child manifesting themselves in enuresis among other things. Events like a parent going away such as in divorce, the addition of a new family member as in the birth of a sibling or the first steps at independence as in the first days of school can all cause bedwetting problems.

The question then becomes what to do about your child’s enuresis symptoms. Almost always the first line of treatment is behavioral therapy. There are several proven methods that routinely work, but before you even attempt this type of treatment, you need to make sure that your child is ready and able to succeed. They need to be able to understand your instructions, and their muscles need to be developed enough so that your child can control them.

As you work with your child, take care to be patient and positive as punishing a child for bedwetting can actually do more harm than good. Toilet training is a process, and as such it takes some time. Generally a child will make forward progress and then fall back a bit before going forward again. So as you are making your way through this, two steps forward, one step back process, realize that this is a normal pattern, and if you feel that the process is working on your last nerve, get some help from a medical professional.

Here are some simple things that you can do to stack the deck in favor of your child’s success. Start by having your child go to the bathroom right before getting into bed, even if they do not have to go. Leave a nightlight on in the bathroom so that your child can easily find their way should they wake during the night. Take your child out of diapers at night. You may want to put a protective mattress cover on their bed just in case they have an accident. You can also place a disposable bed pad on the mattress, and in the event of a bedwetting incident, your child can simply change their nightclothes, throw away the wet pad, replace it with a dry one and go back to sleep. Then in the morning your child can remake their bed and take a shower. By having your child be responsible for cleaning up after his or her own accident, you are supplying motivation for them to have a dry night. You can also encourage them with a small reward when they have a successful night.

You can also help your child be successful by managing their liquid intake and limiting their consumption during evening hours. There are also night wet alarms that awaken the child at the first sign of wetness, but the most important thing is for your child to be motivated for success. So solutions like medication and night alarms are often the last stitch solutions. As you are working on solving your child’s enuresis problems, make the challenge easier by using quality mattress covers and disposable mattress pads to help your child successfully complete their toilet training process.

Further Enuresis Articles

Childrens Incontinence Pants and Patience for Potty Training Success

Saturday, May 1st, 2010

Toilet training your child can be one of the most frustrating things that you have ever had to deal with, and it is one of the most important things that you have ever had to do as well. When it is not done properly, it can have far reaching and damaging ramifications. Some of the problems that can evolve are constipation and impaction, urinary tract infections and dysfunctional voiding. Using childrens incontinence pants during the training process can remove a lot of stress during this time for the parent and the child.

By the age of three most children have mastered the ability to hold their bladders and their bowel movements until they can get to a toilet. Most frequently a child learns to control their bladder well before they learn to control their bowels. If you find yourself getting frustrated because your child just does not seem to be getting the hang of toilet training, seek the advice of your medical professional to keep any unnecessary problems from developing. Your child will sense your frustration even if you are doing your best to mask it.

If your child is truly having problems mastering their toileting skills, the underlying problem can be either physical or, more likely, behavioral. The most common physical cause of toileting problems is a urinary tract infection, but a medical examination can help rule out any physical problems for your child.

If a child is physically healthy, and they continue to resist any attempts at toilet training, they may be challenging you to a power struggle. Frequently this argument begins as the child simply digs in their heels as parents offer excessive reminders to go to the bathroom, and many of these children have been dragged to the bathroom and plunked on the toilet unwillingly. Usually this type of child is a little stubborn and extremely independent.

From a parent’s view having a child who is fiercely independent may not be such a thrill as you are butting heads with them over toilet training, but this independence will probably be an asset to them as young adults making their way in the world. So for now, be patient, stock up on childrens incontinence pants, and realize that eventually your child will realize that toilet training really is in their best interest.

Further Incontinence Pants Articles

Staying Positive and Supportive when Dealing with Bedwetting Enuresis

Saturday, May 1st, 2010

Enuresis is the clinical name for releasing urine from the bladder, and nocturnal enuresis or bedwetting enuresis is simpply known as bedwetting. Generally, once a person is past the age of five, they have attained full bladder control during the daytime and at night. Primary bedwetting enuresis refers to a child who has never been toilet trained, and secondary bedwetting enruesis refers to a child who was toilet trained for at least six months and is now wetting the bed during the night.

Up until about the age of six bedwetting is very common in children. About twenty percent of five and six year old children continue to wet the bed, and boys are far more likely to have the problem than girls. For most children that continue to wet the bed after the age of six, there is no specific reason that doctors can point to as the cause. There seems to be a genetic link to the problem, because about three quarters of children who wet the bed have a sibling or parent who suffered from the same problem. Since it is passed through a family more often than not, researchers have finally found a genetic predisposition for bedwetting enuresis.

While the genetic predisposition for bedwetting exists, it can also have social, medical or psychological roots. For example, a medical problem could consist of diabetes, kidney disease or chronic constipation. Social and psychological causes could be triggered by problems at school or an unstable home life. There are also problems that children generally outgrow, and some children just take a little longer than others. For example, some kids are simply, really heavy sleepers while others take a little longer than normal to develop full control of their bladder muscles. Problems can also occur when a child’s system does not produce enough antidiuretic hormone, which concentrates urine during sleep so that urine volume is greatly reduced during the night. A medical examination can determine if treatment is indicated.

There are many different ways that you can go about helping your child deal with their bedwetting enuresis problems, and while you work through the process remember to stay positive an encouraging. By finding quality products that help to make dealing with accidents less traumatic you can go a long way towards maintaining and repairing your child’s self confidence. At DryForLife we help our customers find the perfect products, like a mattress cover, to manage bedwetting situations, and selections can be discreetly delivered right to your front door.

Further Bed Wetting Articles

Disclaimer - The research, clinical material and advice provided on this website is for informational purposes only and not a substitute for medical treatment, nor an alternative to medical advice. Any action taken in response to the information given on this website is at the reader's own discretion. Readers should always consult their own Doctor in all health matters. Please read our Terms and conditions. Copyright ©2003-2009 DryForLife®