Table 2.
Urinary symptom | PVR <50 mL (N = 780) | PVR 50–99 mL (N = 95) | PVR 100–199 mL (N = 67) | PVR ≥200 mL (N = 45) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Urgency incontinence† (N=312) | 246 (31.5%) | 28 (29.5%) | 17 (25.4%) | 21 (46.7%) |
Stress incontinence‡ (N=351) | 287 (36.8%) | 30 (31.6%) | 14 (20.9%) | 20 (44.4%) |
Daytime frequency§ (N=299) | 229 (29.4%) | 36 (37.9%) | 22 (32.8%) | 12 (26.7%) |
Nocturnal frequency¶ (N=305) | 230 (29.5%) | 34 (35.8%) | 24 (35.8%) | 17 (37.8%) |
None of the above# (N=322) | 262 (33.6%) | 28 (29.5%) | 20 (29.9%) | 12 (26.7%) |
Percentages are column percentages, indicating the proportion of participants in each PVR category who met definitions for each of the above urinary symptom categories.
Urinary symptom categories were not mutually exclusive, in that participants could report more than one type of urinary symptom at their visits
Defined as at least weekly urine leakage occurring at least occasionally when participants felt the urge to urinate but could not reach a bathroom in time.
Defined as at least weekly urine leakage occurring at least occasionally when participants laughed or coughed, or during physical activities.
Defined as having to urinate more than 8 times while awake during an average day, in the absence of a urinary tract infection.
Defined as awakening to urinate more than once during the night in the absence of a urinary tract infection.
Defined as having no symptoms consistent with any of the above categories of urgency incontinence, stress incontinence, diurnal frequency or nocturnal frequency.