Urinary incontinence is any time urine comes out (leaks) when you don’t want it to, something that happens to many women. There are different types of urinary incontinence, and treatment options can depend on the type of incontinence you have.
If you see a doctor to discuss urinary incontinence, you may be asked some of these questions:
“Urge incontinence” is when urine comes out when you have an urge but before you want it to. For example, you feel a need to urinate but on your way to the bathroom, urine comes out.
“Stress incontinence” is when urine comes out during activities that put pressure or “stress” on your bladder. This can include lifting heavy items, coughing, exercising, laughing or sneezing. Incontinence may occur with some or all of these activities, and may happen every time or just sometimes.
Stress incontinence happens when the supports to urethra (the tube that empties the bladder) weaken. Supports include muscles and connective tissues. When these are strong, leaking does not happen, even under the pressure of laughing, coughing or exercising. However, when those supports weaken, activity that places pressure on the bladder and urethra can cause urine to leak out.