at the initial clinical assessment, categorise the woman's urinary incontinence as stress urinary incontinence, mixed urinary incontinence or urgency urinary incontinence/overactive bladder. Start initial treatment on this basis. In mixed urinary incontinence, direct treatment towards the predominant symptom
if stress incontinence is the predominant symptom in mixed urinary incontinence, discuss with the woman the benefit of non-surgical management and medicines for overactive bladder before offering surgery
during the clinical assessment seek to identify relevant predisposing and precipitating factors and other diagnoses that may require referral for additional investigation and treatment
asssessing pelvic organ prolapse
for women presenting in primary care with symptoms or an incidental finding of vaginal prolapse:
take a history to include symptoms of prolapse, urinary, bowel and sexual function
do an examination to rule out a pelvic mass or other pathology and to document the presence of prolapse
for women with pelvic organ prolapse
do not routinely perform imaging to document the presence of vaginal prolapse if a prolapse is detected by physical examination
if the woman has symptoms of prolapse that are not explained by findings from a physical examination, consider repeating the examination with the woman standing or squatting, or at a different time
detailed history
examination
investigations
Notes (1):
urodynamic testing
do not perform multichannel filling and voiding cystometry before primary surgery if stress urinary incontinence or stress-predominant mixed urinary incontinence is diagnosed based on a detailed clinical history and demonstrated stress urinary incontinence at examination
after undertaking a detailed clinical history and examination, perform multichannel filling and voiding cystometry before surgery for stress urinary incontinence in women who have any of the following:
urge-predominant mixed urinary incontinence or urinary incontinence in which the type is unclear
symptoms suggestive of voiding dysfunction
anterior or apical prolapse
a history of previous surgery for stress urinary incontinence
ultrasound is not recommended other than for the assessment of residual urine volume
consider investigating the following symptoms in women with pelvic organ prolapse:
urinary symptoms that are bothersome and for which surgical intervention is an option
symptoms of obstructed defaecation or faecal incontinence
pain
symptoms that are not explained by examination findings
Add information to this page that would be handy to have on hand during a consultation, such as a web address or phone number. This information will always be displayed when you visit this page