Many
womenWomen's way, up to 60% in some studies, can have urinary incontinence in pregnancy. A subgroup of these women can have the problem persist for up to 6 months after delivery. For most of them it goes away, but for some is does not go away. The problem is real, not in your head. The leakage problem is curable, and you do not have to live with it.
If your problem persists longer than 6 months after delivery, you should get seen by a urogynecologist in your area. They will perform a bladder test to determine the cause of the leakage, and then they can offer you appropriate treatment. The two main types of incontinence include loss of urine associated with a strong urge to void (urge incontinence), and loss of urine assiciated with coughing, laughing, sneezing, lifting (Stress incontinence). Urge incontinence can often be cured with medication (e.g., detrol) . The ways to cure stress urinary incontinence include pelvic floor exercises, incontinence prssaries, and same day outpatient surgeries. For more information, go to:
http://www.augs.org/i4a/pages/index.cfm?pageid=205
and look under information for women.