The clinical problem

Bladder and pelvic-floor problems — urinary frequency, urgency, incontinence, pelvic-floor weakness — are common with age and have an outsized effect on daily life and confidence. They are also frequently tolerated in silence, or treated superficially.

The UroLongevity approach

This is the heart of urological practice, and it is where the practice’s subspecialty foundation is most directly felt. Bladder and pelvic health are evaluated thoroughly and treated with the full depth of urological training — not handed off to a referral.

◆ Dr. Shusterman’s take

Pelvic-floor and continence concerns are some of the most quietly life-limiting problems I see — and some of the most treatable. The silence around them is the real obstacle, not the medicine.

What’s involved

At a high level, evaluation and intervention may include:

  • Thorough evaluation of urinary and pelvic-floor symptoms
  • Advanced urine analysis — native urological diagnostics
  • Pelvic-floor assessment for both men and women
  • A range of treatment options, from behavioral and conservative measures to clinical interventions
  • Continence-focused care aimed at restoring confidence and daily function
On dosing Specific dosing and protocols are individualized to your clinical picture and decided in consultation. They are not published here, because one-size guidance is not good medicine.

Honest expectations

Many bladder and pelvic-floor conditions respond well to treatment, and improvement in quality of life can be significant. The right approach depends on the specific diagnosis — which is why careful evaluation comes first. These conditions are common; they should not be silently endured.

A note on clinical tools The practice may use the Restora EMS Chair, a pelvic-floor stimulation device, as a clinical tool in care. Dr. Shusterman has no financial interest in Restora. It is named here only so that its use is understood as a clinical instrument, not an endorsement or financial relationship.