Summary:
The female genital and urinary systems exists in close anatomical and functional
proximity, disorders of one resulting in dysfunction of the other. The investigation and manage-
ment of lower urinary tract disorders must take this important relationship into consideration, as
neither can be viewed in isolation.
The value of estrogen replacement therapy as a treatment of urinary incontinence is controversi-
al and until today there is a little substantial evidence to conclude that estrogen therapy alone is
of value in the treatment of this symptom. This conflicting evidence concerning the therapeutic
benefit of estrogen therapy in stress urinary incontinence seems to be outweighed with other
advantages of estrogen replacement therapy.
Clear evidence exists to suggest that recurrent urinary tract infections can be prevented or even
treated by the use of estrogen therapy. Systemic estrogen replacement appears to relieve the
symptoms of urgency, urge incontinence, frequency, nycturia and dysuria, and low-dose topical
estrogen is effective in the management of atrophic vaginitis. Even with postulating the HRT to be of enormous therapeutic value to postmenopausal women in urogynecology it may stay only
a mean of support of other causal methods of treatment of dysfunction of lower urinary tract.
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