Published 2019/09/23
Have you been noticing that your body doesn’t work the way it used to, especially your bladder? As you age, your bladder is aging too. Don’t worry, this may just mean that your bladder requires more care than it did when you were twenty.
Here are 25 helpful tips on how to maintain bladder health, divided into 12 general tips, 10 tips for people with urinary retention, and 3 tips for people with urinary incontinence.
As men age, their prostate may naturally enlarge, resulting in a condition called benign prostatic hyperplasia(BPH). A common effect of benign prostatic hyperplasia is urinary retention, a condition that makes starting urination and completely voiding the bladder difficult. The enlarged prostate can block the bladder neck—where urine flows from the bladder into the urethra—causing hesitancy and incomplete voiding (of urine).
For both men and women, urinary retention can also be caused by physical obstructions such as severe constipation and urethra stricture, or nerve damage as a result of diabetes, stroke, or spinal cord injury.
Symptoms of urinary retention include:
If you have frequent urge to urinate, strong urge to urinate followed by an involuntary loss of urine, leaking of urine when you sneeze, exercise, or cough, you may have urinary incontinence.
3 Tips to help you hold it in:
If you experience the involuntary leaking of urine, ask your doctor if you have overflow incontinence, which is when the bladder is overfilled and the increased bladder pressure exceeds the ability of the urethra to keep the urine from coming out. You may experience slow-flowing urine, dribbling, and a sense of incomplete emptying. You may lose a small amount of urine when walking, sneezing, or coughing as the result of the bladder being overfilled. It is dangerous to have the bladder be filled but not drained for an extended amount of time because urine can reflux into your ureters (tubes connecting the bladder to the kidneys) and send bacteria to your kidneys, causing kidney infections.
To treat urinary retention, your doctor might prescribe you with intermittent catheters.
CompactCath offers discreet, compact and easy-to-use intermittent catheters in various tips and sizes.