Balneo and PRM Research Journal (Mar 2024)

Pilot study on urinary incontinence rehabilitation using non-invasive methods

  • Elena Costescu,
  • Oana Păduraru,
  • Călin Ștefan Păduraru

DOI
https://doi.org/10.12680/balneo.2024.656
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
p. 656

Abstract

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Urinary incontinence affects up to a quarter of the female population at an active age of over 40 years old. The rate increases by 40% for females over 60 years old. Medical rehabili-tation re-garding stress, urge or mixed geriatric urinary incontinence pathologies by using physical, non-invasive methods is poorly reported in literature, even though the obtained results are quantifiable, consistent, durable through continuous and periodic exercise. The objectives of rehabilitation of stress urinary incontinence, urge incontinence and mixed stress and urge uri-nary incontinence are the conscious toning of muscles of the pelvic floor, patient’s awareness of contractions thereof, and the improvement of these patients’ quality of life. Toning the muscles of the pelvic floor is essential in stress urinary incontinence whereas in urge incontinence it may increase urination control. Physical exercises increase the muscle tonus of the pubococ-cygeus muscles surrounding the vagina and the anus, and whose contraction may stop the evacuated quantity of urine, faeces and gases. The first-line treatment is the Kegel perineal reeducation, with a preventive and curative role in the treatment of urinary incontinence, also during the first and second stage of genital pro-lapse. Reeducation, supervision, guidance, re-laxation, and exercise are essential elements in the reduction of urinary incontinence or pro-lapse in nascent stages. In literature and in practice there are several approaches to pelvic reha-bilitation: some are minimally invasive, while others are non-invasive. In the current investi-gation, a group of elderly patients with stress, neurological or/and mixed urinary inconti-nence—which was linked to a mild genital prolapse in the female patients—were treated with four minimally invasive and non-invasive techniques. Associated comorbidities were type II diabetes (ADO treated) and a previous ischemic stroke in antecedents. Kegel exercises will be supplemented by transcutaneous electrical neurostimulation. Electrical neurostimulation also brings non painful electrical stimulation thus producing the contraction of the external sphinc-ter muscle of urethra and the levator ani muscle inducing the inhibition of the detrusor mus-cle and of the contraction of the urinary bladder. After a 3-4 week training, subjective improve-ments and the spacing out of urinations to 3-4 hours are registered. The continuation of treat-ment up to 2 months (60 days) additionaly improves patients’ functional status, thus substanti-ating and stabilizing the obtained results over time. Positive outcomes were attained, as the pa-tient was able to effectively complete the pelvic rehabilitation course of action. Urinary losses could be completely eliminated and the number of nighttime bath-room visits was lowered to the recommended physiological threshold (one awakening per night).Keywords: prepuberty, posture abnormalities, scoliosis, somatoscopy, physiotherapeutic assessment

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