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kontinens

Kontinens refers to the ability to control urination and defecation. Maintaining continence is a normal function for most people, while incontinence means a loss of control and leakage from the urinary or gastrointestinal tract. The term covers urinary continence and fecal continence.

Urinary continence can be affected by several forms, including stress incontinence, urge incontinence, mixed incontinence, and

Causes and risk factors include aging, pregnancy and childbirth, menopause, prostate surgery, obesity, diabetes, neurological disorders

Assessment includes medical history, symptom diary, and physical exam, with urinalysis to detect infection or diabetes.

Treatment is individualized and often multimodal. For urinary incontinence, options include lifestyle changes, pelvic floor exercises,

Impact on quality of life is substantial; prevalence increases with age. Many individuals benefit from early

overflow
incontinence,
each
with
distinct
mechanisms.
Fecal
continence
relies
on
the
anal
sphincter
and
pelvic
floor;
fecal
incontinence
may
result
from
sphincter
damage,
nerve
injury,
or
impaired
sensation.
Functional
incontinence
arises
when
mobility
or
cognition
limits
toilet
access
despite
intact
continence.
(stroke,
spinal
cord
injury,
Parkinson's),
infections,
medications,
and
constipation
or
chronic
coughing.
Further
tests
may
involve
ultrasound
or
bladder
function
studies;
urodynamics
and
anorectal
testing
are
used
for
specific
suspected
issues.
bladder
training,
medications,
and,
if
needed,
surgical
approaches
such
as
slings,
artificial
sphincters,
or
neuromodulation.
For
fecal
incontinence,
management
includes
diet
adjustments,
medications,
biofeedback,
bulking
agents,
and,
in
severe
cases,
surgical
procedures
or
stoma
installation.
evaluation
and
a
multidisciplinary
care
plan;
reducing
stigma
and
improving
access
to
care
are
important
public
health
goals.