| Literature DB >> 35562699 |
Ying Sheng1, Janet S Carpenter2, James A Ashton-Miller3,4, Janis M Miller5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pelvic floor muscle training is recommended as first line treatment for urinary incontinence in women based on three proposed theorized mechanisms: 'Enhanced Pelvic Floor Muscle Strength,' 'Maximized Awareness of Timing,' and 'Strengthened Core Muscles'. The purpose of this scoping review was to systematically map evidence for and against theorized mechanisms through which pelvic floor muscle training interventions work to reduce urinary incontinence in women.Entities:
Keywords: Kegel; Knack skill; Pelvic muscle exercises; Physical therapy; Transversus abdominis; Urinary incontinence
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35562699 PMCID: PMC9103460 DOI: 10.1186/s12905-022-01742-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Womens Health ISSN: 1472-6874 Impact factor: 2.742
Fig. 1Theorized Mechanisms of PFMT. PFMT, pelvic floor muscle training; PFM, pelvic floor muscle
Fig. 2Modified PRISMA flow diagram showing disposition of articles from the three searches. PRISMA, Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analysis; PFM, pelvic floor muscle; TrA, transversus abdominis
Description of study samples and urinary incontinence type
| Author, year and country | Study design | Sample | UI type | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| n Assigned PFMT | Age M ± SD, (age range) | Condition | n, Comparators | Urge | Stress | Mixed | ||
| Bø (2003), Norway | Secondary analysis of RCT | 52 | 45.5, (24–64) | X | ||||
| Burns et al. (1993), USA | RCT | 83 | 63.0 ± 6.0, 63.0 ± 5.0, (≥ 50) | 40 controls | X | X | ||
| Dinc et al. (2009), Turkey | RCT | 35 | 26.05 ± 4.8, 27.7 ± 7.2 | 20th-34th week of pregnancy | 33 controls | X | X | |
| Dougherty et al. (1993), USA | Pre and post-intervention study | 65 | 51.3 ± 10.6, (35–75) | Mid-age and elderly Parous | X | |||
| Hahn et al. (1993), Sweden | Case-controlled study | 170 | 51.3 ± 0.98, (27–84) | 27 awaiting surgery | X | |||
| Hung et al. (2012), Taiwan | Prospective cohort study | 68 | 50.5 ± 6.0 | X | X | |||
| Kim et al. (2007), Japan | RCT, crossover follow up trial | 70 (35 in each group) | 76.6 ± 5.0, 76.6 ± 3.8 | Elderly | X | |||
| Nystrom et al. (2018), Sweden | Pre and post-intervention study | 61 | 44.7 ± 9.7, (27–72) | X | ||||
| Segal et al. (2016), USA | Prospective cohort study | 215 | 54.4 ± 12.7 | Mid-age and elderly parous | X | |||
| Sun et al. (2018), China | Prospective cohort study | 133 | 33.63 ± 3.98, 42.66 ± 11.35 | Postpartum | X | |||
| Theofrastous et al. (2002), USA | RCT | 69 | 60.6 ± 10.0, (45–79) | 68, bladder training | X | X | ||
| Cammu et al. (2000)a, Belgium | 10-Year follow-up | 45 | 61.0 ± 10.0 | X | ||||
| Junginger et al. (2014), Germany | Prospective cohort study | 55 | Not reported | X | X | X | ||
Blank cells = information was not appliable or not available. Articles retained from search results (n = 13 including 11 for enhanced PFM strength mechanism and 2 for maximized awareness of timing mechanism). This table focuses on tabulation in readiness of integration of information for critical analysis of the general quality of studies on PFMT to treat UI, while also testing for theorized mechanism/s of effect
UI, urinary incontinence; PFMT, pelvic floor muscle training; PFM, pelvic floor muscle; M, mean; SD, standard deviation; RCT, randomized controlled trial
aA 10-year PFMT follow up article was also found in the main PFMT strengthening theory literature search, but it was not included in the analysis of results for the main PFMT strengthening theory since it did not report PFM strength and had no statistical analysis of correlation between changes in PFM strength and incontinence
Description of pelvic floor muscle strength and urinary incontinence measures used
| Author and year | PFM strength | UI | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Subjective | Objective | Direction of change over time | Subjective | Objective | Direction of change over time | |
| Bø (2003) | Vaginal balloon catheter | ↑ | Leakage index | Pad test | Not reported | |
| Burns et al. (1993) | EMG | ↑a | 24-h urinary diary | ↓ | ||
| Dinc et al. (2009) | Perineometer | ↑ | 3-day urinary diary | 1-h pad test | ↓ | |
| Dougherty et al. (1993) | Intravaginal balloon device | ↑ | 24-h urinary diary | 24-h pad test | ↓ | |
| Hahn et al. (1993) | Vaginal palpation | ↑ | Pad test | ↓ | ||
| Hung et al. (2012) | Modified Oxford scale | ↑ | Severity Index score | ↓ | ||
| Kim et al. (2007) | Dynamometer | ↑ | Modified ICIQ questions | ↓ | ||
| Nystrom et al. (2018) | A self-rated PFM strength question | ↑ | PGI-I | ↓ | ||
| Segal et al. (2016) | Vaginal EMG | ↑ | Self-reported UI improvement | ↓ | ||
| Sun et al. (2018) | Vaginal manometer | ↑ | 1-h pad test | ↓ | ||
| Theofrastous et al. (2002) | Balloon devices | ↑ | Urinary diary | 48-h pad test | ↓ | |
| Cammu et al. (2000)b | Vaginal palpationc | ↑ Timely precontraction skill | Self-assessment | ↓ | ||
| Junginger et al. (2014) | Vaginal palpationd | Perineal ultrasounde | ↑ Timely precontraction skill | Posttreatment improvement scales, analog scales for satisfaction, frequency of precontraction | ↓ | |
Blank cells = Information was not appliable or not available. Articles retained from search results (n = 13 including 11 for enhanced PFM strength mechanism and 2 for maximized awareness of timing mechanism). This table focuses on tabulation in readiness of integration of information for critical analysis of the general quality of studies on PFMT to treat UI, while also testing for theorized mechanism/s of effect. All pad tests for UI were performed under provocative maneuver to ask participants to, such as cough, pick, set up and down, run or walk, jump, step, bounce, rise, lay down sit-ups, or stand
PFM, pelvic floor muscle; UI, urinary incontinence; PFMT, pelvic floor muscle training; EMG, electromyography; ICIQ, International Consultation on Incontinence Questionnaire; PGI-I, Patient Global Impression of Improvement Questionnaire
aPelvic muscle electromyography scores measured as quick and sustained contractions only increased in PFMT + biofeedback group, not in the PFMT only group
bA 10-year PFMT follow up article was also found in the main PFMT strengthening theory literature search, but it was not included in the analysis of results for the main PFMT strengthening theory since it did not report PFM strength and had no statistical analysis of correlation between changes in PFM strength and incontinence
cVaginal palpation to correct PFM contraction
dVaginal palpation to evaluate pelvic floor dysfunction
ePerineal ultrasound to evaluate pelvic floor dysfunction and for bladder-neck effective PFM contraction
Statistical analysis of linkage between changes in pelvic floor muscle strength and urinary incontinence
| Author and year | Evidence | Statistical tests of associations between changes in PFM strength and UI with treatment | Association findings by type of measures | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Direct | Indirect | Subjective PFM strength and UI | Objective PFM strength, subjective UI | Subjective PFM strength, objective UI | Objective PFM strength and UI | ||
| Bø (2003) | X | 0.23 ( | Moderate | Weak | |||
| Burns et al. (1993) | X | 0.26 ( | Weak | ||||
| Dinc et al. (2009) | X | − 0.17 ( | NS | NS | |||
| Dougherty et al. (1993) | X | No value | NS | NS | |||
| Hahn et al. (1993) | X | No value (Pitman’s permutation test, | Value not reported | ||||
| Hung et al. (2012) | X | 0.265 (Spearman’s rho, | Weak | Weak | |||
| Kim et al. (2007) | X | No value; 4.545 ( | NS | ||||
| Nystrom et al. (2018) | X | 35.54 (4.96–254.61) (OR, 95% CI; | Moderate to large | ||||
| Segal et al. (2016) | X | No value (Spearman’s rho) | NS | ||||
| Sun et al. (2018) | X | 1.042 (1.010–1.070) (OR, 95% CI) | Weak | ||||
| Theofrastous et al. (2002) | X | 0.32 (Pearson’s r, | Moderate to NS | ||||
| Cammu et al. (2000)c | X | NSd | NS | ||||
| Junginger et al. (2014) | X | − 0.36 (Spearman’s rho, | Moderate | ||||
Blank cells = information was not appliable or not available. Only measures and changes that related to statistical analysis of correlation between the changes in PFM strength and incontinence were included in the table
PFM, pelvic floor muscle; UI, urinary incontinence; OR, odds ratio; NS, non significant; CI, confidence interval
aAt 3 months for treatment group and at 12 months for both treatment and control groups
bNon significant correlations were found between increased PFM strength with reduction in incontinence episode per week and in pad weight, significant correlation = 0.32 for the correlation between an increase in maximum sustained vaginal pressure and reduction in incontinence episodes per week in women with stress incontinence
cA 10-year PFMT follow up article was also found in the main PFMT strengthening theory literature search, but it was not included in the analysis of results for the main PFMT strengthening theory since it did not report PFM strength and had no statistical analysis of correlation between changes in PFM strength and incontinence
dNS due to few participants—more often use Knack, the greater improvement; 3 leaked urine during stress test
e71% women routinely used Knack had less UI; improvement of symptoms was not associated with length of follow up and did not decrease over time
Instruments used in the reviewed studies to measure pelvic floor muscle strength
| Measures common name (review article) | What is assessed | Reliability | Validity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Subjective | Vaginal digital examination [ | Grading | – | – |
| Modified Oxford scale [ | Grading | r = 0.27–0.95 (inter-rater) [ r = 0.93 (test–retest) [ | Correlation with perineometric pressure 0.79 [ Contaminated by IAP | |
| A self-rated PFM strength question [ | Self-reported improvement of PFM strength | – | – | |
| Objective | Perineometer-like devices [ | Maximum voluntary vaginal closure | r = 0.79–0.80 (inter-rater) [ | Good agreement with Brink digital exam score [ Contaminated by IAP |
| Intravaginal balloon-like device [ | Maximum voluntary vaginal closure | r = 0.52–0.85 (test–retest) [ | Contaminated by IAP [ | |
| Needle EMG: quantitative EMG [ | Muscle | r = 0.89 (range 0.78–0.95) [ hard to repeat | Not possible to measure contractile force using EMG [ Contaminated by IAP | |
| Surface EMG (vaginally): quantitative EMG [ | Muscle | Between-visit ICC ranging 0.76–0.97 [ | Measured PFM activity other than vaginal closure pressure Contaminated by adjacent muscles [ | |
| A handheld dynamometer (mTasMF-01, ANIMA, Japan) [ | Hip adductor muscle strength | – | Not measure PFM strength | |
| Sagittal dynamic (perineal) ultrasound [ | Cephalic displacement (in mm) of the bladder neck in a sagittal view available as biofeedback (as opposed to caudal movement observable when she pushes down instead) | r = 0.52–0.96 (intra-rater) [ | Visual “lift” of the bladder neck with a correct PFM contraction |
—, Information was not available; IAP, intraabdominal pressure; PFM, pelvic floor muscle; EMG, electromyography; ICC, intra-class correlation coefficients
Details of pelvic floor muscle training regimens
| Author and year | PFMT at home dose | PFMT in clinic dose | Graded training | Duration | PFMT delivery | Methods for compliance | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| # Sessions/day | # Contractions/session | Minutes/session | # Sessions/week | # Contractions/session | Minutes/session | Individual | Group | Supervised | Unsupervised | Device assisted training | ||||
| Bø (2003) | 3 | 3 sets of 8–12 per daya | 1 | 6 mo | X | X | X | X | Meet wkly for intensive group | |||||
| Burns et al. (1993) | 4 sets of 20 (10 quick + 10 sustained), then ↑ 10 per set to 200 | 1 | 25–35 | X | 8 wkb | X | X | X | Biofeedback (1 of 2 groups) | Call and exercise reminder cards | ||||
| Dinc et al. (2009) | 2–3 | 3 sets of 10–15 | X | 12–28 wk | X | X | ||||||||
| Dougherty et al. (1993) | 3/wk | 15–45 | X | 16 wk | X | X | Audio recording | Call and written records wkly | ||||||
| Hahn et al. (1993) | 6–8 | Maximal, during jumping and coughing | 1 × 4–5 wks then monthly for measures | 1–18 mo (mean 4.7 ± 0.2) | X | X | ||||||||
| Hung et al. (2012) | ≥ 3 | 6 high-intensity (hold 10 s and rest 10 s) | 4 mo | X | X | |||||||||
| Kim et al. (2007) | ≥ 2 for follow up | 2–3 sets | 30 for follow up | 2 then monthlyc | 20a | 60 | 12 wkd | X | X | X | X | Fitness exercises | ||
| Nystrom et al. (2018) | 3 | 6 basic + 6 advance | X | 3 mo | X | X | App-based + Knack | |||||||
| Segal et al. (2016) | 2 | 1–7 | 1/two wks | 3 | X | 16 wk | X | X | FemiScan trainer device | |||||
| Sun et al. (2018) | 3 | 10 slow + 3–4 fasta | 20 | 2 | 20 | 6–8 wk | X | X | X | Biofeedback + electrical stimulatione | ||||
| Theofrastous et al. (2002) | 2 | 5 quick + 10–20 sustained | 1 × 4 wks | 30 | X | 12 wk | X | X | X | Biofeedback | ||||
| Cammu et al. (2000)f | As frequently as possible + Knack | 2 | 20 | 30 | X | 10 wk | X | X | X | |||||
| Junginger et al. (2014) | Engage precontraction into daily life | Median 2 (1–6) for study period | ?g | 15–90 (total 60–240) | 4–6 wkh | X | X | X | Perineal ultrasound | |||||
Blank cells = information was not appliable or not available. Articles retained from search results (n = 13 including 11 for enhanced PFM strength mechanism and 2 for maximized awareness of timing mechanism). This table focuses on tabulation in readiness of integration of information for critical analysis of the general quality of studies on PFMT to treat urinary incontinence, while also testing for theorized mechanism/s of effect
PFMT, pelvic floor muscle training; PFM, pelvic floor muscle; mo, month; wk, week; TrA, transversus abdominis
aPerformed in supine, sitting, and standing positions with legs apart
bFollow up at 3 months and 6 months
cAdded 2 times 60-min exercise sessions plus fitness exercises for 12 weeks and then monthly for 12 months
dFollow up at 12 months
eFor women with two times incontinence after completed basic training or with week strength for active training
fA 10-year PFMT follow up article was also found in the main PFMT strengthening theory literature search, but it was not included in the analysis of results for the main PFMT strengthening theory since it did not report PFM strength and had no statistical analysis of correlation between changes in PFM strength and incontinence
gTrA precontraction + Knack + urge strategies, number of contractions was not clear from the article
hFollow up at 1 to 16 months (median 7, mean 7.6)