 Because I do so much, I offer a lot of treatments, but I do specialized testing of both men and women called Eurodynamic Evaluation, which gives us a lot of information about bladder function and how well people empty their bladders. I also do, so for urinary incontinence and prolapse, I do for incontinence. There's kind of two different kinds of incontinence. There's stress incontinence, which is leaking urine when you cough, sneeze, lift heavy things. For that, I do surgical interventions, which can include slings, which some people have heard of. I also use women's own tissue to create slings. I can also do bladder neck suspensions vaginally and abdominally, so that can be surgery that way. And then, you know, we do a lot of, you know, non-invasive stuff, too, like pessaries, which are little insertable devices that women put in the vagina to help stop leakage or stop prolapse. And then for urgent incontinence or the gotta go, gotta go, you know, can't make to the bathroom kind of leakage, most often we can treat that with medications or lifestyle changes, but in the patients that that doesn't work, I offer Botox injections in the bladder, as well as we have a acupuncture type procedure for that as well. And then sacral neuromodulation, which is essentially a special device that we implant that can help kind of restore the nerves to the bladder and help them work correctly. For pelvic organ prolapse, we can manage that conservatively as well with those same pessaries or we can do surgery for those. And I offer a wide variety of surgical options using women's own tissue, so I don't typically use mesh for vaginal surgery, so we can treat this vaginally or we can treat it through an abdomen with robotic surgery and robotic sacral copepaxi and that does use mesh, but that's usually the gold standard. And so those are the options for prolapse. And then for a neurogenic bladder, I do also Botox is a big part of that patient population and medication management as well, but also in patients that need it, I can make, you know, do reconstructions where we can either make their bladder bigger using a piece of their intestine or we can make diversion so to create different ways for them to evacuate their urine either through a bag or through a channel that they can catheterize through the abdomen.