1. Serum estradiol does not differentiate stress, mixed and urge incontinent women around menopause. A report from the Women's Health in the Lund Area (WHILA) study
- Author
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Pia Teleman, Maria Andrada Hamer, Göran Samsioe, Karin Källén, and Jonas Lidfeldt
- Subjects
Serum ,Stress incontinence ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Urge urinary incontinence ,Urinary Incontinence, Stress ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Female urinary incontinence ,Urinary incontinence ,Mixed urinary incontinence ,Severity of Illness Index ,Hospitals, University ,Pelvic floor dysfunction ,Lower urinary tract symptoms ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Medicine ,estradiol ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Humans ,Mass Screening ,Sweden ,Gynecology ,Hysterectomy ,Estradiol ,Stress urinary incontinence ,business.industry ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Urinary Incontinence, Urge ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Perimenopause ,Menopause ,Neck of urinary bladder ,Logistic Models ,Urinary Incontinence ,Reproductive Medicine ,Women's Health ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To outline serum estradiol levels in perimenopausal women with stress, mixed or urge incontinence. We believe the majority of urgency symptoms in perimenopausal women to be caused by a pelvic floor dysfunction and a hypermobility of the bladder neck. If this is the case, there would be no difference in estradiol levels between the groups. STUDY DESIGN: Setting: University hospital. In the observational Women's Health in the Lund Area study, a subset of 400/2221 women reporting urinary incontinence completed a detailed questionnaire regarding lower urinary tract symptoms and had their serum steroid hormone levels measured. Statistical analyses were made by Chi-square test, nonparametrical tests, ANOVA, multi- and univariate logistic regression analysis. RESULTS: Stress incontinence was reported by 196, mixed incontinence by 153 and urge incontinence by 43 women; in 369, serumestradiol values were available. Serum estradiol did not differ significantly between stress incontinent (median 49.5pmo/l, range 2.63-875.4), urge incontinent (median 31.6pmol/l, range 2.63-460.7) or mixed incontinent women (median 35.5pmol/l, range 2.63-787.9, p=0.62). Logistic regression analysis correcting for age, parity, hormonal status, smoking, hysterectomy and BMI also failed to show any difference in estradiol levels between the groups (p=0.41-0.58). CONCLUSION: No significant differences in serum estradiol levels between stress, mixed or urge incontinent perimenopausal women could be demonstrated.
- Published
- 2011