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Title: Severe depression determines quality of life in urinary incontinent women. Author: Stach-Lempinen B, Hakala AL, Laippala P, Lehtinen K, Metsänoja R, Kujansuu E. Journal: Neurourol Urodyn; 2003; 22(6):563-8. PubMed ID: 12951664. Abstract: AIMS: The purpose of this study was to assess depression and anxiety in urinary incontinent women and to investigate factors influencing their self-perception of urinary incontinence severity. METHODS: In this prospective study, 82 incontinent women estimated the severity of urinary incontinence using a visual analogue scale and completed a validated quality of life instrument: urinary incontinence severity score. Psychiatrists evaluated depression and anxiety using a structured interview of Hamilton Depression and Hamilton Anxiety Scales. Patients were classified on the basis of history and urodynamic evaluation into two diagnostic groups: stress urinary incontinence (n = 57) and idiopatic urge incontinence with or without stress incontinence (n = 25). RESULTS: Major depression occurred in 44.0% of women with idiopatic urge (+/- stress) incontinence and in 17.5% women with stress incontinence (odds ratio (OR 3.69), 95% confidence interval (95% CI 1.30-10.49)). Twenty two patients had severe incontinence defined as Urinary Incontinence Severity Score > or =14 points (upper quartile) and 23 patients defined as visual analogue scale > or =9 (upper quartile). In logistic regression analysis, major depression (OR 5.57; 95% CI 1.19-26.11), urge incontinence diagnosis (OR 23.13; 95% CI 1.90-282.11), parity (OR 2.33; 95% CI 1.16-4.60) and high Urgency Score (OR 1.94; 95% CI 1.32-2.85) predicted Urinary Incontinence Severity Score above the upper quartile. Only the pad-test (OR 1.01; 95% CI 1.00-1.02) predicted visual analogue scale above upper quartile. CONCLUSIONS: Major depression correlates with reduced incontinence specific quality of life. This data also suggests an association between depression and idiopatic urge incontinence.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]