Greer Joy A, Xu Rengyi, Propert Kathleen J, Arya Lily A
Division of Urogynecology, Women's Health Department, Naval Medical Center Portsmouth, Portsmouth, Virginia.
Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology, Division of Urogynecology, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Neurourol Urodyn. 2015 Aug;34(6):539-43. doi: 10.1002/nau.22615. Epub 2014 Apr 21.
Disability, an individual's reduced capacity to perform physical tasks encountered in daily routine, is associated with urinary incontinence in the elderly. Our objective was to determine if urinary incontinence is associated with disability in community-dwelling women 40 years and older.
Cross-sectional study among US women ≥40 years (n = 4,458) from National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys 2005-2010. We estimated the age-stratified weighted prevalence and factors independently associated with disability (Activities of Daily Living (ADLs), Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADLs), mobility, and functional limitations) in women with and without urinary incontinence while controlling for confounders of the association between disability and urinary incontinence.
The weighted prevalence of all disabilities was higher in women with urinary incontinence than women without urinary incontinence across most decades of life with the greatest difference in the prevalence of mobility disabilities: 40-49 years (12.1% vs. 7.0%), 50-59 years (17.0% vs. 9.2%), 60-69 years (28.3% vs. 19.8%), and 70+ years (43.8% vs. 33.0%, all P < 0.05). On multivariable analysis, after controlling for the confounding effect of age, co-morbidities, and income-poverty ratio, urinary incontinence was weakly associated with disabilities. The adjusted odds ratio (95% confidence interval) of disabilities for urinary incontinence was ADL 1.96 (1.07, 3.58), IADL 1.18 (0.78, 1.78), mobility 1.26 (1.01, 1.56), and functional limitations 1.36 (1.07, 1.73).
Urinary incontinence is weakly associated with disabilities and cannot be implicated as a cause of disability in community dwelling women.
残疾是指个体在日常生活中执行身体任务的能力下降,与老年人尿失禁有关。我们的目的是确定尿失禁是否与40岁及以上社区居住女性的残疾有关。
对2005 - 2010年美国国家健康与营养检查调查中年龄≥40岁的女性(n = 4458)进行横断面研究。我们在控制尿失禁与残疾之间关联的混杂因素的同时,估计了有和没有尿失禁的女性中按年龄分层的加权患病率以及与残疾(日常生活活动(ADL)、工具性日常生活活动(IADL)、活动能力和功能受限)独立相关的因素。
在大多数年龄段,有尿失禁的女性中所有残疾的加权患病率均高于无尿失禁的女性,其中活动能力残疾患病率差异最大:40 - 49岁(12.1%对7.0%),50 - 59岁(17.0%对9.2%),60 - 69岁(28.3%对19.8%),70岁及以上(43.8%对33.0%,所有P < 0.05)。在多变量分析中,在控制年龄、合并症和收入贫困率的混杂效应后,尿失禁与残疾呈弱相关。尿失禁导致残疾的调整优势比(95%置信区间)为ADL 1.96(1.07,3.58),IADL 1.18(0.78,1.78),活动能力1.26(1.01,1.56),功能受限1.36(1.07,1.73)。
尿失禁与残疾呈弱相关,不能被认为是社区居住女性残疾的原因。