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    Subjects/OBG/Obstetrics
    Obstetrics
    medium
    baby OBG

    A 56 year old multipara woman presented with grade II/III uterine prolapse with cystocele. She complains of passing urine on coughing and sneezing. What is the type of urinary incontinence seen in this patient ?

    A. Neurogenic bladder La d
    B. Overflow incontinence
    C. Stress incontinence
    D. Urge incontinence

    Explanation

    ## Correct Answer: C. Stress incontinence Stress incontinence is the involuntary loss of urine during activities that increase intra-abdominal pressure (coughing, sneezing, laughing, exercise) without detrusor contraction. In this 56-year-old multipara woman with grade II/III uterine prolapse and cystocele, the mechanism is clear: multiparity has weakened the pelvic floor muscles and damaged the urethral sphincter support. The prolapsed uterus and cystocele further compromise the anatomical position of the bladder neck and proximal urethra, which normally act as a pressure transmission zone. When intra-abdominal pressure rises (cough/sneeze), it is transmitted equally to bladder and urethra only if the bladder neck remains above the pelvic floor. In this patient, the cystocele and prolapse have displaced the bladder neck below the pelvic floor, preventing equal pressure transmission. Additionally, the weakened pelvic floor muscles cannot provide adequate support to the urethral sphincter complex. The result: urine leaks during stress maneuvers. This is the classic presentation of stress incontinence in postmenopausal women with pelvic organ prolapse—a hallmark Indian gynecological presentation in multipara women with poor pelvic floor support. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Neurogenic bladder** — Neurogenic bladder results from spinal cord injury, cauda equina syndrome, or neuropathy affecting bladder innervation (S2–S4 reflex arc). This patient has no neurological deficit; her incontinence is purely mechanical due to pelvic floor weakness and anatomical displacement. The bladder is neurologically intact—it is the structural support that is lost. **B. Overflow incontinence** — Overflow incontinence occurs when the bladder is overdistended and urine leaks due to high intravesical pressure exceeding sphincter resistance (seen in urinary retention, BPH, spinal cord injury). This patient has no retention, no elevated post-void residual, and no obstruction. Her incontinence is triggered by acute pressure spikes, not chronic overdistension. **D. Urge incontinence** — Urge incontinence is involuntary urine loss preceded by a sudden, irresistible urge to void, caused by detrusor overactivity or reduced bladder capacity. This patient reports incontinence *during* cough/sneeze with no mention of urgency or detrusor instability. The trigger is mechanical stress, not neurogenic detrusor contraction. ## High-Yield Facts - **Stress incontinence** = urine loss during cough, sneeze, laugh, exercise (increased intra-abdominal pressure) without detrusor contraction. - **Multiparity + pelvic floor weakness** = loss of urethral sphincter support and bladder neck descent below pelvic floor → stress incontinence. - **Cystocele** = anterior vaginal wall prolapse with bladder descent; disrupts normal pressure transmission to bladder neck. - **Postmenopausal women** with prolapse are at highest risk for stress incontinence due to estrogen deficiency and cumulative pelvic floor trauma. - **Pelvic floor exercises (Kegel)** are first-line conservative management; surgical repair (mid-urethral sling, colporrhaphy) for grade II–III prolapse with incontinence. ## Mnemonics **STRESS = Structural loss** **S**tress incontinence = **S**tructural support loss (weak pelvic floor, prolapse, sphincter damage). Triggered by **S**neezing, **S**training, **S**ports. Remember: anatomy is broken, not the nerve. **Prolapse + Cough = Stress** If you see **prolapse** (uterine, cystocele, rectocele) + **cough/sneeze/laugh** incontinence in a multipara woman, think **stress incontinence**. The pelvic floor cannot support the bladder neck during pressure spikes. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs pelvic prolapse with incontinence to lure students into thinking "prolapse = neurogenic bladder" or "prolapse = overflow." The trap is forgetting that prolapse causes *mechanical* loss of urethral support, not neurological dysfunction or retention—the hallmark of stress incontinence. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian primary health centers, multipara women (often with 4–6 children, poor antenatal care, and vaginal delivery without pelvic floor rehabilitation) present with grade II–III prolapse and stress incontinence in their 50s–60s. A simple bedside test: ask the patient to cough while standing—if urine leaks without urgency, stress incontinence is confirmed. Conservative management (pelvic floor exercises, estrogen cream) works in mild cases; surgical repair (vaginal hysterectomy + mid-urethral sling) is definitive for symptomatic grade II–III prolapse. _Reference: DC Dutta's Textbook of Gynaecology (6th ed.), Ch. 17 (Uterovaginal Prolapse); Bailey & Love's Short Practice of Surgery, Ch. 72 (Urology)_

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