Neurology International (Sep 2012)

Vascular incontinence: incontinence in the elderly due to ischemic white matter changes

  • Ryuji Sakakibara,
  • Jalesh Panicker,
  • Clare J. Fowler,
  • Fuyuki Tateno,
  • Masahiko Kishi,
  • Yohei Tsuyuzaki,
  • Emina Ogawa,
  • Tomoyuki Uchiyama,
  • Tatsuya Yamamoto

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4081/ni.2012.e13
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 2
pp. e13 – e13

Abstract

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This review article introduces the new concept of vascular incontinence, a disorder of bladder control resulting from cerebral white matter disease (WMD). The concept is based on the original observation in 1999 of a correlation between the severity of leukoareosis or WMD, urinary symptoms, gait disorder and cognitive impairment. Over the last 20 years, the realization that WMD is not a benign incidental finding in the elderly has become generally accepted and several studies have pointed to an association between geriatric syndromes and this type of pathology. The main brunt of WMD is in the frontal regions, a region recognized to be crucial for bladder control. Other disorders should be excluded, both neurological and urological, such as normalpressure hydrocephalus, progressive supranuclear palsy, etc., and prostatic hyperplasia, physical stress incontinence, nocturnal polyuria, etc. Treatment involves management of small vessel disease risk factors and anticholinergic drugs that do not easily penetrate the blood brain barrier to improve bladder control.

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