OBJECTIVES: To investigate the association between urinary incontinence and female sexual function in a non-clinical population. METHODS: A self-administered questionnaire was distributed to 2159 female employees of two hospitals. RESULTS: Of the 883 sexually active participants, pure stress urinary incontinence was reported in 18.3%, pure urge urinary incontinence in 6.8%, mixed urinary incontinence in 15.1% and no urinary incontinence in 59.8%. The prevalence of female sexual difficulty, defined by the Female Sexual Function Index total score ≤ 26.55, was 52.0%, 56.1%, 54.3% and 42.2%, respectively (P < 0.05). After adjustment of age, menstrual status, length of marriage, having children and relationship with the partner, all types of urinary incontinence showed a significant association with female sexual difficulty with an odds ratio of 1.6-1.8. Taking into consideration the individual domains, pure urge urinary incontinence was a risk factor for decreased sexual lubrication and more sexual pain, and mixed urinary incontinence was a risk factor for less sexual satisfaction, whereas pure stress urinary incontinence was not related to a difficulty in individual domains. CONCLUSIONS: Stress urinary incontinence and urge urinary incontinence are associated with general impairment of female sexual function to a mild degree. Only urge urinary incontinence is related to sexual difficulty in specific domains including sexual lubrication and sexual pain.
OBJECTIVES: To investigate the association between urinary incontinence and female sexual function in a non-clinical population. METHODS: A self-administered questionnaire was distributed to 2159 female employees of two hospitals. RESULTS: Of the 883 sexually active participants, pure stress urinary incontinence was reported in 18.3%, pure urge urinary incontinence in 6.8%, mixed urinary incontinence in 15.1% and no urinary incontinence in 59.8%. The prevalence of female sexual difficulty, defined by the Female Sexual Function Index total score ≤ 26.55, was 52.0%, 56.1%, 54.3% and 42.2%, respectively (P < 0.05). After adjustment of age, menstrual status, length of marriage, having children and relationship with the partner, all types of urinary incontinence showed a significant association with female sexual difficulty with an odds ratio of 1.6-1.8. Taking into consideration the individual domains, pure urge urinary incontinence was a risk factor for decreased sexual lubrication and more sexual pain, and mixed urinary incontinence was a risk factor for less sexual satisfaction, whereas pure stress urinary incontinence was not related to a difficulty in individual domains. CONCLUSIONS:Stress urinary incontinence and urge urinary incontinence are associated with general impairment of female sexual function to a mild degree. Only urge urinary incontinence is related to sexual difficulty in specific domains including sexual lubrication and sexual pain.
Authors: Kang Jun Cho; Kyu-Sung Lee; Myung-Soo Choo; Ju Tae Seo; Jang Hwan Kim; Jong Bo Choi; Seung-June Oh; Joon Chul Kim Journal: Int Urogynecol J Date: 2016-09-29 Impact factor: 2.894
Authors: Giovanni Corona; Andrea M Isidori; Antonio Aversa; Marco Bonomi; Alberto Ferlin; Carlo Foresta; Sandro La Vignera; Mario Maggi; Rosario Pivonello; Linda Vignozzi; Francesco Lombardo Journal: Rev Endocr Metab Disord Date: 2020-03 Impact factor: 6.514
Authors: Maciej Zalewski; Gabriela Kołodyńska; Agata Zalewska; Waldemar Andrzejewski Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health Date: 2021-02-25 Impact factor: 3.390