The pelvic floor responds to changes in trunk pressure, elevating during low-pressure exhale and descending during high-pressure exhale. Voicing occurs during exhalation, spanning low-to-high trunk-pressure, yet it is unknown how voicing affects the pelvic floor. The aim of this study was to quantify pelvic floor response to voicing and identify if there are differences for women with stress urinary incontinence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction And Hypothesis: Pelvic floor muscle ultrasound is an important clinical tool for improving motor coordination and even strength. Although the gold standard approach involves transperineal probe placement, this is not always feasible with sensitive populations, requires privacy owing to probe placement, and additional sonography training. This article introduces a novel transabdominal method for measuring pelvic floor muscle motion that incorporates a reference point within the bladder.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Pelvic floor physical therapists have long utilized breathing cues with exercises and are beginning to incorporate vocalization tasks. To date, there have been no publications describing pelvic floor displacement during vocalization tasks. This study is a preliminary investigation into the changes in bladder shape distortion as a proxy for pelvic floor muscle displacement during respiratory and phonatory tasks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFScand J Med Sci Sports
November 2018
Patellar tendon pathology appears to develop in young athletes. It is not known how this tendon develops through adolescence. This longitudinal study investigated proximal patellar tendon development during the adolescent growth spurt in young ballet dancers and identified whether puberty (estimated by maturity offset) had an effect on tendon development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFScand J Med Sci Sports
September 2018
Patellar tendinopathy (tendon pain and dysfunction), or jumper's knee, is prevalent in adult jumping athletes. Pathology in the proximal patellar tendon is a key risk factor for developing patellar tendinopathy. When pathology develops in the proximal patellar tendon is not known, although it is reported to exist in adolescent athletes.
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