Female Urinary Incontinence · Tustin, CA

Take back bladder control

Urinary incontinence in women is far more common than most realize — and far more treatable than most expect. Whether you’re dealing with leaks during exercise, sudden urgency, or constant dribbling, we offer the full spectrum of care: from pelvic floor therapy to Bulkamid, sling procedures, MonaLisa Touch, and access to clinical research.

FPMRS-trained urologist
Clinical trial access
Discreet consultation
Compassionate care
Understanding the Condition

It’s common — and you have options

Urinary incontinence refers to the involuntary leakage of urine. It can range from occasional leakage to a complete inability to control urination. While it affects people of all ages and genders, it’s particularly common in women — especially as they age. Despite how common it is, many women silently accept leaks as their “new normal.” You don’t have to. Effective treatments exist for every type and severity.

Common Forms

Five types

Identifying which type of incontinence you experience is the first step to the right treatment.

Stress Incontinence

Leakage during physical activities that pressure the bladder — coughing, sneezing, laughing, exercising

Urge Incontinence

Also known as overactive bladder. Sudden intense urge followed by involuntary leakage

Mixed Incontinence

A combination of stress and urge incontinence — very common in women

Overflow Incontinence

Bladder doesn’t empty completely, causing constant dribbling

Functional Incontinence

Physical or mental impairments prevent reaching the toilet in time

Why It Happens

Common causes

Understanding the underlying cause guides the most effective treatment path.

Pelvic Floor Weakness

Weakness in muscles supporting the bladder and urethra

Pregnancy & Childbirth

Can weaken pelvic floor muscles and damage bladder nerves

Menopause

Hormonal changes during menopause can contribute

UTIs

Infections can irritate the bladder and cause leakage

Neurological Disorders

MS, Parkinson’s, stroke can affect nerve control of the bladder

Getting Answers

How it’s diagnosed

Diagnosis typically includes a physical examination, medical history review, and urine tests — and may also involve urodynamic testing or imaging studies. A thorough evaluation determines which type of incontinence you have and what’s actually causing it, so the treatment plan can be tailored to you specifically.

Treatment Options

From lifestyle to advanced procedures

We offer the full spectrum of treatments — starting with the least invasive option appropriate for your situation.

1
Tier
Foundational

Lifestyle changes

Dietary modifications, weight management, and bladder training can meaningfully improve symptoms — often as a first-line approach alongside other treatments.

2
Tier
Strengthening

Pelvic floor exercises

Kegel exercises strengthen the pelvic floor muscles, improving bladder control. Often more powerful than people expect — especially when performed correctly with guidance.

3
Tier
Pharmaceutical

Medications

Certain medications may be prescribed to relax the bladder or treat underlying conditions contributing to incontinence — particularly helpful for urge incontinence.

4
Tier
Non-Surgical Support

Medical devices

Devices such as pessaries or urethral inserts may be recommended to support the bladder or control urine leakage — an effective non-surgical option.

Clinical Trial Opportunity

For stress urinary incontinence: the RESTRAIN-SUI trial

If you have stress urinary incontinence (SUI) — leakage with coughing, sneezing, laughing, or exercise — you may qualify for the RESTRAIN-SUI clinical research study, an Eli Lilly-sponsored trial enrolling women with SUI at our Tustin location. Trial participation includes thorough evaluation and access to investigational therapy.

Women only Stress urinary incontinence BMI 27+ Tustin office
FPMRS Subspecialty Expertise

Care from Dr. Lamia Gabal, MD, FPMRS

Female urinary incontinence sits at the heart of Dr. Gabal’s clinical focus. As a board-certified urologist with a subspecialty in Female Pelvic Medicine and Reconstructive Surgery (FPMRS), she brings the exact training this condition demands — including the surgical expertise required for advanced procedures like sling placement, when those become necessary.

Stop accepting leaks as normal.

Schedule a discreet consultation with our urology team. We’ll evaluate carefully, listen to your concerns, and build a treatment plan tailored to your situation — no judgment, no embarrassment.