Pelvic Exercises Treat
Persistent Incontinence
Physical therapy aimed at strengthening
the pelvic floor muscles may help many women who suffer lingering
incontinence months after giving birth, a study suggests.
Many women have urinary incontinence
for a time after pregnancy, and pelvic floor exercises after childbirth
have been shown to prevent or alleviate the problem. Less is known
about how effective the exercises are for women whose incontinence
lasts more than three months after delivery, the new study's lead
author stated.
The study, said Dr. Chantale Dumoulin
of the University of Montreal, is the first to assess supervised
pelvic floor conditioning for persistent post-pregnancy incontinence.
She and her colleagues report the findings in the journal Obstetrics
& Gynecology.
The study involved 64 women with
stress urinary incontinence, in which urine leaks during a physical
stress like heavy lifting. All of the women were still suffering
symptoms at least weekly, three months or more after giving birth.
Dumoulin and her colleagues randomly
assigned the women to one of three groups: one that received eight
sessions of pelvic floor conditioning with a physical therapist;
one that received the same treatment plus deep abdominal exercises;
and a "control" group that received eight massage sessions.
For women in the exercise groups,
each weekly session also involved therapy that electrically stimulated
the pelvic floor muscles, and both groups performed exercises
at home.
After eight weeks, more than 70
percent of the women in the exercise groups -- 31 of 43 -- were
no longer incontinent, while no one in the control group was cured,
according to the researchers. Most of the other exercisers had
at least a substantial improvement in their urine leakage.
The addition of deep abdominal
exercises did not appear to augment the effects of pelvic floor
conditioning. This is important, Dumoulin said, because one of
the "new theories" in physical therapy is that such abdominal
training improves the outcome of pelvic floor training, and some
believe that pelvic conditioning should be done "indirectly" via
the deep abdominal muscles.
"The results of this study indicate
that the addition of abdominal training does not further improve
urinary incontinence," she said.
Yet exactly why the pelvic floor
exercises helped these women is unclear. The researchers found
that pelvic floor strength did not improve in either exercise
group. They speculate that factors other than muscle strength,
such as improved perception of pelvic floor contraction, may deserve
the credit.
SOURCE: Obstetrics & Gynecology,
September 2004.
Reference
Source 89
September 20, 2004
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
|