A clinical audit of female urinary incontinence at a urogynaecology clinic of a tertiary hospital in Durban South Afric

Background. Urinary incontinence (UI) is a common condition with an increasing prevalence worldwide. Although it is not a life-threatening condition, it can be very disabling.Objective. To describe the clinical profiles, risk factors, diagnosis, treatment and clinical outcomes of women with differen...

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Main Authors: Tunde Dehinbo, Suran Ramphal, Jagedisa Moodley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Health and Medical Publishing Group 2015-01-01
Series:South African Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology
Online Access:http://www.sajog.org.za/index.php/sajog/article/download/983/499
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spelling doaj-4c9d239bb1254bd087cb816f0ecc10b62020-11-25T00:57:13ZengHealth and Medical Publishing GroupSouth African Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology2305-88622015-01-01212333810.7196/sajog.983A clinical audit of female urinary incontinence at a urogynaecology clinic of a tertiary hospital in Durban South AfricTunde DehinboSuran RamphalJagedisa MoodleyBackground. Urinary incontinence (UI) is a common condition with an increasing prevalence worldwide. Although it is not a life-threatening condition, it can be very disabling.Objective. To describe the clinical profiles, risk factors, diagnosis, treatment and clinical outcomes of women with different subtypes of UI who attended a tertiary hospital in Durban, South Africa.Methods. A retrospective chart review was performed. A structured data form was used to obtain the relevant information.Results. Seven hundred and fifty-eight of 945 charts with a diagnosis of UI were analysed. Stress urinary incontinence (SUI) was the most common subtype of UI (30%). The mean (standard deviation (SD)) age was 50.9 (15.2) years; mean (SD) parity 2.8 (1.4) and mean (SD) body mass index 29.2 (5.3) kg/m2. Indians (n=366, 48.3%) were the predominant racial group; black Africans constituted 32.7% (n=248). Mid-urethral tape was the preferred surgical treatment for SUI (n=134, 62.0%). Urge UI was treated mainly with pharmaceutical agents (n=138, 74.2%) with physiotherapy as adjunctive therapy. Urogenital fistulas were repaired via laparotomy (n=42, 53.9%) and vaginally (n=25, 32%). Mid-urethral tapes and Burch colposuspension had success rates of 97% and 83.3%, respectively. Both laparotomy and vaginal fistula repairs had success rates of 95%.Conclusions. Stress UI was the most common subtype of UI observed in this study. Patients were predominantly Indians and overweight or obese. The majority of patients with urogenital fistulas were black Africans. Surgical outcomes at our centre were in keeping with those in international reports.http://www.sajog.org.za/index.php/sajog/article/download/983/499
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tunde Dehinbo
Suran Ramphal
Jagedisa Moodley
spellingShingle Tunde Dehinbo
Suran Ramphal
Jagedisa Moodley
A clinical audit of female urinary incontinence at a urogynaecology clinic of a tertiary hospital in Durban South Afric
South African Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology
author_facet Tunde Dehinbo
Suran Ramphal
Jagedisa Moodley
author_sort Tunde Dehinbo
title A clinical audit of female urinary incontinence at a urogynaecology clinic of a tertiary hospital in Durban South Afric
title_short A clinical audit of female urinary incontinence at a urogynaecology clinic of a tertiary hospital in Durban South Afric
title_full A clinical audit of female urinary incontinence at a urogynaecology clinic of a tertiary hospital in Durban South Afric
title_fullStr A clinical audit of female urinary incontinence at a urogynaecology clinic of a tertiary hospital in Durban South Afric
title_full_unstemmed A clinical audit of female urinary incontinence at a urogynaecology clinic of a tertiary hospital in Durban South Afric
title_sort clinical audit of female urinary incontinence at a urogynaecology clinic of a tertiary hospital in durban south afric
publisher Health and Medical Publishing Group
series South African Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology
issn 2305-8862
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Background. Urinary incontinence (UI) is a common condition with an increasing prevalence worldwide. Although it is not a life-threatening condition, it can be very disabling.Objective. To describe the clinical profiles, risk factors, diagnosis, treatment and clinical outcomes of women with different subtypes of UI who attended a tertiary hospital in Durban, South Africa.Methods. A retrospective chart review was performed. A structured data form was used to obtain the relevant information.Results. Seven hundred and fifty-eight of 945 charts with a diagnosis of UI were analysed. Stress urinary incontinence (SUI) was the most common subtype of UI (30%). The mean (standard deviation (SD)) age was 50.9 (15.2) years; mean (SD) parity 2.8 (1.4) and mean (SD) body mass index 29.2 (5.3) kg/m2. Indians (n=366, 48.3%) were the predominant racial group; black Africans constituted 32.7% (n=248). Mid-urethral tape was the preferred surgical treatment for SUI (n=134, 62.0%). Urge UI was treated mainly with pharmaceutical agents (n=138, 74.2%) with physiotherapy as adjunctive therapy. Urogenital fistulas were repaired via laparotomy (n=42, 53.9%) and vaginally (n=25, 32%). Mid-urethral tapes and Burch colposuspension had success rates of 97% and 83.3%, respectively. Both laparotomy and vaginal fistula repairs had success rates of 95%.Conclusions. Stress UI was the most common subtype of UI observed in this study. Patients were predominantly Indians and overweight or obese. The majority of patients with urogenital fistulas were black Africans. Surgical outcomes at our centre were in keeping with those in international reports.
url http://www.sajog.org.za/index.php/sajog/article/download/983/499
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