Stress Incontinence / Urinary Incontinence

When “just do Kegels” and normal tests do not match the reality of leaking during workouts, meetings, or simple daily movement.
Stress Incontinence

The Clinical Reality

Urinary leakage is often discussed as a strength problem, but function is frequently the issue. Stress leakage typically shows up when pressure rises quickly through the abdomen and pelvis, like coughing, jumping, lifting, or sprinting. In those moments, the pelvic floor and its connective tissues need to coordinate, lengthen, and then close at the right time.

Urgency patterns are different. They tend to involve a fast, hard-to-delay signal from the bladder and pelvic nerves, sometimes paired with pelvic floor gripping or guarding. In both patterns, the driver can be less about “weak vs strong” and more about timing, tissue sensitivity, breath mechanics, hip and trunk coordination, and how the nervous system is regulating the pelvic floor.

Why Standard Care Fails

Standard care often focuses on either chemistry or structure. Medications may reduce urgency for some people, but they do not directly normalize pelvic floor coordination, trigger point sensitivity, or nerve tension patterns. Surgical approaches can be appropriate for selected cases, but they do not automatically address guarding, altered motor control, or load transfer through the pelvis and trunk.

Another common gap is over-prescribing strengthening. If the pelvic floor is already over-recruited or bracing, more strengthening can reinforce the same pattern that contributes to urgency, incomplete emptying sensations, pelvic pressure, or leakage under load. Functional drivers are often missed because they do not reliably show up on imaging or routine exams.

Signs & Symptoms

Do any of these sound familiar?

Leakage with impact or effort

Small spurts with running, jumping, coughing, laughing, lifting, or during a hard set. Often worse when fatigue sets in or form changes.

Urgency that feels disproportionate

A sudden “gotta go now” signal with limited ability to delay, sometimes triggered by arriving home, hearing running water, or transitioning from sitting to standing.

Frequency without clear infection

Urinating often “just in case,” planning routes around bathrooms, or feeling like the bladder fills quickly despite normal urinalysis.

Pelvic floor gripping or difficulty relaxing

Tension, heaviness, or a clenched feeling in the pelvic floor, glutes, or deep hips. May be paired with constipation, pain with sitting, or discomfort with vaginal penetration.

Unpredictable symptoms under stress

Symptoms spike with high-pressure weeks, travel, poor sleep, or intensive training blocks, suggesting a nervous system and coordination component.

Root Cause Contributors

The mechanical drivers behind your symptoms

Pelvic floor myofascial hypertonicity and trigger points

Protective holding patterns can reduce coordination and alter closure timing, contributing to urgency, incomplete emptying sensations, or leakage under load.

Impaired lumbopelvic load transfer

Suboptimal ribcage, diaphragm, and abdominal wall strategy can drive excessive pressure into the pelvic floor during impact, lifting, or breath holding.

Pudendal and obturator nerve mechanosensitivity

Irritable nerve pathways can amplify urgency signaling and contribute to guarding patterns that interfere with relaxation and timing.

Hip rotator and adductor over-recruitment

Deep hip muscles often co-contract with the pelvic floor. When they are overactive or tender, they can reinforce pelvic bracing and reduce motor options.

What to Expect

Your roadmap to recovery
Weeks 1 to 2
Clearer identification of your leakage pattern and triggers. Many patients notice improved awareness of gripping and better ability to relax the pelvic floor, with early changes in symptom predictability.
Weeks 3 to 6
Meaningful reduction in episodes for common triggers and improved control during transitions like standing, coughing, or light training. Coordination and pressure-management strategies become more automatic.
Weeks 7 to 12
Improved capacity for higher loads and more complex environments, such as travel, long workdays, or return to running and lifting. Ongoing work may focus on durability, flare-up control, and long-term self-management.

Frequently Asked Questions

Get answers to common questions

Stress leakage usually correlates with a pressure spike, like coughing, jumping, or lifting. Urgency incontinence is driven more by a sudden, difficult-to-delay urge that can occur even without impact. Many people have mixed patterns, so we map triggers carefully and tailor the plan accordingly.

Not always. Some patients leak because the pelvic floor cannot coordinate quickly under load, not because it is globally weak. Others have high tone or guarding, where more strengthening can worsen urgency, pelvic pressure, or incomplete emptying sensations. We focus on the right sequence: restore excursion and timing first, then build capacity.

Yes. Pelvic floor PT is often essential for motor retraining, graded exposure, and return-to-activity programming. Our role frequently complements PT by addressing myofascial trigger points, tissue sensitivity, and neural drivers using acupuncture and dry needling, then coordinating goals and milestones.

Most people start with weekly sessions for a short block to change tissue tone and establish coordination. Frequency then typically tapers as capacity improves. Your schedule, symptom severity, and whether you are also in pelvic floor PT influence the plan.

Goals are usually improved predictability, fewer leakage episodes, better urgency control, and restored confidence in training and daily life. Some patients achieve major improvement quickly, while others need a longer progression, especially with mixed patterns, postpartum changes, or long-standing guarding.

If you have blood in urine, burning with urination, fever, new severe pelvic pain, rapidly worsening symptoms, new neurologic changes, or concern for infection or other medical conditions, you should seek medical evaluation promptly. We coordinate care and can refer when specialized testing or medical management is appropriate.

Ready to Find Real Answers?

Schedule a free 15-minute discovery call to discuss your case and determine if our approach is right for you.

Related Conditions We Treat

118 W. 72nd, Rear Lobby, Upper West Side, NY 10023 Evidence-based acupuncture and dry needling on the Upper West Side, NYC. From chronic pain, headaches, and pelvic floor dysfunction, Dr. Jordan Barber integrates the highest level of training with compassionate care to help you thrive. Disclaimer: This site does not provide medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to your health. Read our full disclaimer

Got Questions?

Limited spots available each week book now to reserve yours
Free Discovery Call
Got Questions Before You Book?
Schedule an Apointment

Phone

Email Us

support@drbarberclinic.com
COPYRIGHT ©ELEMENT ONE ACUPUNCTURE PLLC | ALL RIGHTS RESERVED