Nurs Res. 2022;71(5):341-352. doi: 10.1097/NNR.0000000000000595. Epub 2022 Mar 22.
Limited information on the normal range of urination frequencies in women is available to guide bladder health promotion efforts.
This study used data from the Boston Area Community Health (BACH) Survey to (a) estimate normative reference ranges in daytime and nighttime urination frequencies in healthy women based on two operational definitions of "healthy" and (b) compare urination frequencies by age, race/ethnicity, and fluid intake.
A secondary analysis of cross-sectional interview data collected from female participants was performed using less restrictive ("healthy") and strict ("elite healthy") inclusion criteria. All analyses were weighted to account for the BACH sampling design. Normative reference values corresponding to the middle 95% of the distribution of daytime and nighttime urination frequencies were calculated overall and stratified by age, race/ethnicity, and fluid intake. Generalized linear regression with a log-link was used to estimate rate ratios of daytime and nighttime urination frequencies by age, race/ethnicity, and fluid intake.
Of the 2,534 women who completed the BACH follow-up interviews, 1,505 women met healthy eligibility criteria, and 300 met elite healthy criteria. Overall, reference ranges for urination frequencies were 2-10 times/day and 0-4 times/night in healthy women and 2-9 times/day and 0-2 times/night in elite healthy women. Women ages 45-64 years, but not 65+ years, reported a greater number of daytime urination than those aged 31-44 years, whereas women 65+ years reported a greater number of nighttime urination. Black women reported fewer daytime urination and more nighttime urinations than White women. Women who consumed less than 49 oz daily reported fewer daytime and nighttime urinations than those who drank 50-74 oz; drinking 75+ oz had only a small effect on urination frequencies.
Normative reference values for daytime and nighttime urination frequencies were similar in women using strict and relaxed definitions of health. These results indicate a wide range of "normal" urination frequencies, with some differences by age, race/ethnicity, and fluid intake. Future research is needed to examine urination frequencies in minority women and whether fluid intake amount and type influence the development of lower urinary tract symptoms.
目前可用于指导膀胱健康促进工作的女性排尿频率正常范围的信息有限。
本研究使用波士顿地区社区健康(BACH)调查的数据,(a)根据两种“健康”的操作定义,估计健康女性白天和夜间排尿频率的参考范围,以及(b)按年龄、种族/族裔和液体摄入量比较排尿频率。
对从女性参与者收集的横断面访谈数据进行二次分析,使用更宽松的(“健康”)和严格的(“精英健康”)纳入标准。所有分析均进行了加权,以考虑 BACH 抽样设计。根据白天和夜间排尿频率分布的中间 95%计算了与所有年龄、种族/族裔和液体摄入量相关的白天和夜间排尿频率的参考值。使用具有对数链接的广义线性回归估计年龄、种族/族裔和液体摄入量对白天和夜间排尿频率的比率比。
在完成 BACH 随访访谈的 2534 名女性中,有 1505 名女性符合健康资格标准,有 300 名女性符合精英健康标准。总体而言,健康女性的排尿频率参考范围为白天 2-10 次/天和夜间 0-4 次/夜,而精英健康女性的参考范围为白天 2-9 次/天和夜间 0-2 次/夜。45-64 岁的女性比 31-44 岁的女性报告更多的白天排尿次数,而 65 岁以上的女性报告更多的夜间排尿次数。与白人女性相比,黑人女性白天的排尿次数较少,夜间的排尿次数较多。每天摄入少于 49 盎司液体的女性比摄入 50-74 盎司液体的女性白天和夜间的排尿次数都少;而摄入 75 盎司以上液体对排尿频率的影响较小。
使用严格和宽松的健康定义,女性的白天和夜间排尿频率的参考值相似。这些结果表明“正常”排尿频率范围较宽,并且在年龄、种族/族裔和液体摄入方面存在一些差异。需要进一步研究少数民族女性的排尿频率以及液体摄入的量和类型是否会影响下尿路症状的发生。