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Easy treatment for male SUI

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MEN often tolerate stress urinary incontinen­ce (SUI) for more than two years before seeking medical help and onethird put up with it for more than five years, a new study suggests.

SUI occurs when physical activity or exertion – a cough, heavy lifting, exercise – causes the bladder to leak urine.

The study, published in the journal Urology, found the median length of time the men had waited to seek treatment for their SUI was 32 months, with almost a third having waited more than five years.

They also found that patients in their 80s had waited a median of more than seven years.

“Male SUI is rare but is known to have significan­t negative psychosoci­al and emotional effects, and represents a common reason for post-treatment anxiety and depression,” said co-author Allen Morey, Professor at the University of Texas Southweste­rn Medical Centre in the US.

But there are simple and safe solutions – including minor surgeries – that can either help boost a weakened sphincter muscle for patients with minimal leakage (the sling procedure), or replace the sphincter muscle altogether (installati­on of an artificial urinary sphincter) for more severe cases of leakage, the researcher said.

“Using new diagnostic techniques, we are now able to accurately diagnose and streamline treatment recommenda­tions to resolve this bothersome problem for our patients,” Morey mentioned. For the study, the researcher­s reviewed the cases of 572 men, evaluated for anti-incontinen­ce surgery, between 2007 and 2017.

The study calls on men’s general practition­ers and urologists to perform a standing cough test, in which a patient coughs while the doctor watches for any accidental urine release, as a routine part of their male patients’ physicals.

“Our goal is not just to spread the word that effective and safe treatments exist for men with stress urinary incontinen­ce, but also to facilitate an immediate and accurate diagnosis among stress urinary incontinen­ce patients,” said first author Joceline Fuchs, from the University of Texas Southweste­rn Medical Centre.

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