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Engl J Med. 2003 Mar 6;348(10):900-7.
Urinary incontinence after vaginal delivery or cesarean section.
Rortveit G
,Daltveit AK,Hannestad YS,Hunskaar
S;Norwegian EPINCONT
Study.
Epidemiology of Incontinence in the County of Nord-Trondelag study, Bergen,
Nor
Way.
guri.rortveit@isf.uib.no
Background:
It is uncertain whether women who deliver by cesarean section have an
increased risk of urinary incontinence as compared with nulliparous women and
whether women who deliver vaginally have an even higher risk.
Methods:
We studied 15,307 women enrolled in the Epidemiology of Incontinence in the
County of Nord-Trondelag (EPINCONT) study, which involved a community-based
cohort. The data base for this study was linked to data from the Medical Birth
Registry of Norway. We included women who answered questions related to urinary
incontinence, were younger than 65 years of age, and had had no deliveries,
cesarean sections only, or vaginal deliveries only.
Results:
The prevalence of any incontinence was 10.1 percent in the nulliparous group;
age-standardized prevalences were 15.9 percent in the cesarean-section group and
21.0 percent in the vaginal-delivery group. Corresponding figures for moderate
or severe incontinence were 3.7 percent, 6.2 percent, and 8.7 percent,
respectively; figures for stress incontinence were 4.7 percent, 6.9 percent, and
12.2 percent, respectively; figures for urge incontinence were 1.6 percent, 2.2
percent, and 1.8 percent, respectively; and figures for mixed-type incontinence
were 3.1 percent, 5.3 percent, and 6.1 percent, respectively. As compared with
nulliparous women, women who had cesarean sections had an adjusted odds ratio
for any incontinence of 1.5 (95 percent confidence interval, 1.2 to 1.9) and an
adjusted odds ratio for moderate or severe incontinence of 1.4 (95 percent
confidence interval, 1.0 to 2.1). Only stress and mixed-type incontinence were
significantly associated with cesarean sections. The adjusted odds ratio for any
incontinence associated with vaginal deliveries as compared with cesarean
sections was 1.7 (95 percent confidence interval, 1.3 to 2.1), and the adjusted
odds ratio for moderate or severe incontinence was 2.2 (95 percent confidence
interval, 1.5 to 3.1). Only stress incontinence (adjusted odds ratio, 2.4; 95
percent confidence interval, 1.7 to 3.2) was associated with the mode of
delivery.
Conclusions:
The risk of urinary incontinence is higher among women who have had cesarean
sections than among nulliparous women and is even higher among women who have
had vaginal deliveries. However, these findings should not be used to justify an
increase in the use of cesarean sections.

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