Postnatal pelvic floor muscle training for preventing and treating urinary incontinence : where do we stand?


Autoria(s): Dumoulin, Chantale
Contribuinte(s)

Faculté de médecine - École de réadaptation

Data(s)

27/09/2016

31/12/1969

27/09/2016

01/10/2006

Resumo

Purpose of review: Postnatal pelvic floor muscle training aims to rehabilitate the pelvic floor muscles. To be effective, a certain exercise dosage must be respected. Recent trials evaluated the effect of different programs on prevention/treatment of urinary incontinence immediately after delivery and in treatment of persistent incontinence. Recent findings: Only three systematic reviews, six trials, and four follow-up studies have been published in the past two decades. High heterogeneity in postnatal pelvic floor muscle training programs is observed throughout the literature, making comparisons difficult. In the prevention/treatment of postnatal urinary incontinence immediately after delivery and in persistent incontinence, supervised intensive programs prove more effective than standard postnatal care. Longer-term results have yet to show advantages for postnatal training programs. Summary: Although a certain exercise dosage must be respected for a postnatal pelvic floor muscle training program to be effective, a few randomized controlled trials present such dosage. Randomized controlled trials should study the effect of supervised, intensive training protocols with adherence aids. As standard care does not seem to reduce the prevalence of postnatal urinary incontinence, obstetrics services must address delivery of postnatal pelvic floor muscle training.

Identificador

Dumoulin C. (2006, octobre). Postnatal pelvic floor muscle training for preventing and treating urinary incontinence: Where do we stand? Current Opinion in Obstetrics and Gynecology, 18(5), 538–543.

http://hdl.handle.net/1866/15836

http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.gco.0000242957.17620.5d

Idioma(s)

en

Relação

Current Opinion in Obstetrics and Gynecology;Vol. 18, no 5

Palavras-Chave #pelvic floor muscle #physiotherapy #postnatal #stress urinary incontinence
Tipo

Article