AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the effectiveness of two pelvic floor muscle training protocols for women with stress urinary incontinence: one using standard voluntary training and the other incorporating involuntary reflexive training triggered by body movements.
  • Conducted as a triple-blind randomized controlled trial, both groups underwent 16 weeks of training, resulting in a significant reduction in urinary incontinence scores for both groups, but no noteworthy difference between them.
  • While both methods led to improvements in incontinence symptoms, neither protocol eliminated the condition, suggesting that future research should explore more advanced training techniques to enhance pelvic floor muscle function.

Article Abstract

Introduction And Hypothesis: Although involuntary reflexive pelvic floor muscle contractions seem crucial during stress urinary incontinence-provoking situations, hitherto existing guidelines feature voluntary pelvic floor muscle training only. Two pelvic floor muscle protocols were compared regarding their effect on stress urinary incontinence in women: one focusing on standard physiotherapy with voluntary pelvic floor muscle training, the other additionally including involuntary reflexive pelvic floor muscle training.

Methods: This study was designed as a triple-blind prospective randomized controlled trial with women suffering from stress urinary incontinence with two physiotherapy intervention groups (control group: standard physiotherapy, n = 48, experimental group: standard physiotherapy plus involuntary reflexive pelvic floor muscle training triggered by whole-body movements such as jumps n = 48). Both interventions lasted 16 weeks (9 personal physiotherapy consultations and 78 home training sessions). Group differences and development over time were analyzed concerning the primary outcome International Consultation on Incontinence Modular Questionnaire Urinary Incontinence short form (ICIQ-UIsf) by mixed effect regression models.

Results: The ICIQ-UIsf score decreased significantly over time for both groups by about 3 points from about 10 to about 7 points with no group differences at any point in time.

Discussion: This trial did not find any additional benefit for stress urinary incontinence by adding involuntary reflexive pelvic floor muscle training to standard training. Both training protocols showed similar clinically relevant improvements; however, there was still moderate incontinence after interventions. Future studies should test and apply pelvic floor muscle function-oriented training methods for pelvic floor muscle hypertrophy, intramuscular coordination, and power, which are more in line with conventional skeletal muscle training, i.e., performed with higher intensities and workout.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8885550PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00192-021-04701-5DOI Listing

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