Pelvic floor exercises for female stress urinary incontinence
β Scribed by L. Mouritsen
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1994
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 908 KB
- Volume
- 5
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0937-3462
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β¦ Synopsis
Urinary continence is maintained by passive and active forces at the bladder neck and along the urethra. Pelvic floor exercises can improve these forces, provided there is sufficient muscular awareness, nerve supply and intact muscles. Instructions in the exercises must include a test for correct muscle use. Biofeedback methods seem superior. Patients must attend intensive repeated instruction for 2-3 months and perform daily exercises at home. All patients can benefit from pelvic floor exercises, but to save money and time various scoring systems, including grade of incontinence, menopausal state and pelvic muscle strength can be applied. Patients with mild incontinence and a strong pelvic floor prior to exercises have the best prognosis. Long-term follow-up after exercises shows a cure rate of 50% for stress incontinence, but this depends on the continuation rate of exercise performance. A sustained effect demands continuous or repeated exercises and attempts to protect the pelvic floor.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The reliability of measurements of pelvic floor muscle strength using a vaginal balloon catheter connected to a pressure transducer was tested in 28 healthy women, mean age 32.3 years (21-50). Fourteen women (group 1) performed three pelvic floor muscle contractions in three series with reinstallat
Pelvic floor muscle exercises are recommended as an initial treatment to women with stress urinary incontinence. This treatment is often unsuccessful because of patient noncompliance. A post-test, experimental control group design was used to examine Pender's (1992) concept of an external cue to act