Deakin University
Browse

Does successful treatment of constipation or faecal impaction resolve lower urinary tract symptoms? A structured review of the literature

Download (907.62 kB)
Version 2 2024-06-17, 06:02
Version 1 2005-01-01, 00:00
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-17, 06:02 authored by J Ostaszkiewicz, C Ski, L Hornby
Consensus guidelines advocate the treatment of constipation and faecal impaction in order to improve symptoms of urinary frequency, urgency and urinary incontinence and to promote bladder emptying in the absence of urinary tract obstruction. This structured review of the literature was undertaken to search for and appraise evidence to support or negate the hypothesis of this relationship. The search strategy was comprehensive and identified six relevant studies. Two of these had been conducted on an adult population and four studies involved children with constipation. These studies were appraised for methodological quality. It was found that sample sizes were small and evidence was inconsistent. Variable methods of reporting meant that data were not able to be pooled for meta-analysis.Based on the limited and conflicting evidence, it is recommended that further research be undertaken to identify any correlation between bowel and bladder function.

History

Location

West Leederville, W.A.

Open access

  • Yes

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2005, Australian & New Zealand Continence Journal

Journal

Australian and New Zealand Continence Journal

Volume

11

Pagination

70-80

ISSN

1448-0131

Issue

3

Publisher

Cambridge Publishing