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Urinary incontinence in elite female athletes and dancers.

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TLDR
Urinary leakage is common among elite athletes and dancers, particularly during training, but also during daily life activities, and the activity most likely to provoke leakage was jumping.
Abstract
The aim of this study was, to determine the frequency of urinary loss in elite women athletes and dancers. Elite athletes in eight different sports, including ballet, filled in an evaluated questionnaire about urinary incontinence while participating in their sport/dancing and during daily life activities. A total of 291 women with a mean age of 22.8 years completed the questionnaire, providing a response rate of 73.9%. Overall, 151 women (51.9%) had experienced urine loss, 125 (43%) while participating in their sport and 123 (42%) during daily life. The proportion of urinary leakage in the different sports was: gymnastics 56%, ballet 43%, aerobics 40%, badminton 31%, volleyball 30%, athletics 25%, handball 21% and basketball 17%. During sport 44% had experienced leakage a few times, 46.4% now and then, and 9.6% frequently. During daily life the figures were: 61.7% a few times, 37.4% now and then, and 0.8% frequently. Of those who leaked during sport, 95.2% experienced urine loss while training versus only 51.2% during competition (P<0.001). The activity most likely to provoke leakage was jumping. Sixty per cent (91/151) occasionally wore pads or panty shields because of urine loss. Urinary leakage is common among elite athletes and dancers, particularly during training, but also during daily life activities.

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Citations
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Development of a pad test to assess stress urinary incontinence in young healthy women: a pilot study

TL;DR: The preliminary study based on pad tests from two research studies revealed that these tests were not provocative enough to elicit urine loss in young, nulliparous women with SUI.

Prevalence of symptoms of dysfunction of lower urinary tract among athletes

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Évaluation de la prévalence de l'incontinence urinaire chez les femmes pratiquant le trail à l’île de la Réunion lors d'une des 3 courses du Grand Raid en octobre 2013

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Integrating Pelvic Health and Orthopedic Programs to Treat Incontinence at the Community Level for Female Runners: A Pilot Study

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References
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Journal Article

Urinary incontinence in elite nulliparous athletes.

TL;DR: In this article, the prevalence of the symptom of urinary incontinence during athletic endeavors among a group of nulliparous, elite college varsity female athletes was found to be high.
Journal ArticleDOI

A population study of urinary incontinence and nocturia among women aged 20-59 years : prevalence, well-being and wish for treatment

TL;DR: The aim was to study urinary incontinence and nocturia in a female population: prevalence, effect on well‐being, wish for treatment and result of treatment in primary health care.
Journal Article

Exercice and incontinence

TL;DR: The data suggest that incontinence during exercise is a common, although little known, problem and in addition to the behavioral adaptations which women initiate on their own, surgical and nonsurgical treatments may be of benefit.
Journal ArticleDOI

Exercise and incontinence.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors assess the relationship between exercise and incontinence and find that exercise is associated with the highest incidence of women having episiotemporal and pelvic discomfort.
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