Vaginal cones or balls to improve pelvic floor muscle performance and urinary continence in women post partum: A quantitative systematic review.

Midwifery

School of Health Sciences, Centre for Maternal and Child Health Research, Division of Midwifery and Radiography, City University London, 1 Myddelton Street, London EC1R 1UW, UK. Electronic address:

Published: November 2015

Objectives: the vaginal use of cones or balls aims to increase muscle performance and thereby prevent or treat urinary incontinence. To date, no systematic review has focused on the effectiveness of these devices specifically during the postpartum period. The objectives of this review were: to compare the effectiveness of vaginal cones or balls for improvement of pelvic floor muscle performance and urinary continence in the postpartum period to no treatment, placebo, sham treatment or active controls; to gather information on effect on perineal descent or pelvic organ prolapse, adverse effects and economical aspects.

Design: quantitative systematic review.

Data Sources: 14 scientific databases (including PubMed and CINAHL) and the world-wide web; experts were contacted for published and unpublished data.

Review Methods: studies had to be randomised/quasi-randomised trials and have female participants up to one year after childbirth. The intervention is compared to no treatment, placebo, sham treatment or active controls. Outcome measures relate to pelvic floor muscle performance or urinary incontinence. Studies were selected, 'risk of bias' assessed, and data extracted by two reviewers independently with inter-reviewer agreement.

Main Findings: one study met the inclusion criteria; its original data were re-analysed. In an intention-to-treat analysis, compared with the control group, the cone group showed a statistically significant lower rate of urinary incontinence; compared with the exercise group, the prevalence was similar. However, the validity of the analysis is limited.

Conclusions And Implications: the evidence gained from this systematic review is very limited. The use of cones may be helpful for urinary incontinence after childbirth, but further research is needed.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.midw.2015.08.011DOI Listing

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