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Effects of Hypopressive Abdominal Gymnastics in Urinary Incontinence

U

University of Jaén

Status

Completed

Conditions

Menopause
Older Adults

Treatments

Other: Hypopressive intervention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05722821
- University of Jaén.

Details and patient eligibility

About

The increase in the age of the population is a problem that affects both Spain and the rest of the world. Life expectancy increases, and this will influence the quality of life that older people will have. The quality of life is related to the health of the population. Women live longer than men and have diseases such as urinary incontinence that are more frequent in them. This is related to childbirth, increasing age, and menopause due to the hormonal level. Therefore, there are a series of problems related to both physical and mental health associated both with increasing age and with the situation of hormonal change that occurs after the onset of menopause. All of this will influence deficient pelvic musculature, sexual function, sleep quality, and depression/anxiety. Conservative treatment using hypopressive abdominal exercises has been shown to be beneficial at the level of health in female populations with urinary incontinence. The challenge lies in designing exercise programs that, in addition to achieving these benefits, are attractive with acceptance and adherence. The objective of this doctoral thesis is to study the effects of hypopressive abdominal exercises for 12 weeks on quality of life related to urinary incontinence in women, sleep quality, anxiety and depression, and female sexual function in women. Spanish postmenopausal women.

Full description

Society is facing a longer life expectancy due to improvements in medicine, which leads to an increase in the aging population. According to the National Institute of Statistics (INE), the population over 65 years of age has been increasing from 2001 to 2020, assuming a growth of 14.6% in Europe and 13.6% in Spain. Demographic indicators indicate a greater increase in life expectancy in women (from 82.7-85.1 years) than in men (75.9-79.6 years).

Currently, women present more specific health problems than men due to their physiological conditions, such as the menopausal transition. At the vasomotor level, hot flashes or hot flashes form the most distinctive element of this stage at the sexual level, such as the lack of lubrication, discomfort or pain, and altered function; on a psychological level, anxiety and depression, which is a syndrome linked to disorders such as sadness and its impact on menopause, is quite significant; and the affectation of sleep that are one of the main complaints of women at this stage. All these symptoms affect the quality of life of women both physically and mentally.

With aging and the incidence of menopause, a series of changes in women's health take place, constituting a natural and inevitable process; which can cause unwanted events, such as urinary incontinence. UI is defined as the involuntary loss of urine, within urinary incontinence the most prevalent is stress urinary incontinence (SUI) in 10-30% in most studies, and compared to men 75% of women are more affected than men. This condition can cause disorders in the quality of life, and among the main risk factors are increasing age, parity, family history of prolapse, obesity, lifting heavy objects and constipation also influences. Women with prolapses may present with vaginal, bladder, bowel, back, abdominal, and sexual symptoms. Women frequently suffer from UI due to atrophic changes in the urogenital tract. Therefore, a conservative treatment where the evaluation of the pelvic floor strength and the functional use of pelvic floor muscle training are previously carried out is recommended to achieve health benefits and therefore quality of life.

Recent studies have shown that women with pelvic floor dysfunctions who perform pelvic floor muscle training through hypopressive abdominal exercises improve the pelvic muscles and quality of life of postmenopausal women with UI and prolapses. The hypopressive abdominal exercises (AHT) technique can be classified as a breathing exercise. It was developed by Dr. Marcel Caufriez, a physical therapist in 1980. This inventor theorized that the decrease in abdominal pressure obtained with AHT may produce reflex activation of the abdominal wall and pelvic floor muscles, thus reducing UI and prolapses. The AHT, in summary, involves diaphragmatic breathing, total air breathing, and gradual contraction of the transverse abdominis and intercostal muscles with rise in the diaphragm and apnea. This conservative treatment technique is adaptable to the mind (since you have to concentrate on breathing) and body integration exercise that can be worked on anywhere and anytime, without the need for special equipment.

The directors of this doctoral thesis have experience in this field, with several works published in journals located in the first tercile and quartile of their categories according to the JCR index.

Enrollment

112 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

65+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Women with urinary incontinence with cessation of menstrual activity for 12 months or more and who are able to understand the instructions and exercise protocols of this project.

Exclusion criteria

  • Contraindications for physical tests, cancer or serious illness, musculoskeletal and neurological diseases (Parkinson's disease, multiple sclerosis, diabetic neuropathy, cerebrovascular accident, etc.).
  • Taking drugs that affect the central nervous system or antidepressants, or lack of willingness to participate in the study.
  • People who have previously carried out pelvic floor reeducation programs.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

112 participants in 2 patient groups

Experimental group
Experimental group
Description:
An experimental group (GE): that after an initial evaluation will be subjected to a hypopressive abdominal gymnastics program, for 12 weeks with 2 weekly sessions (Tuesday and Thursday, controlling adherence to the sessions through attendance), with a duration of 45 min per session. Once the intervention is finished, you will be subjected to a final evaluation to see if there is a difference or not with the results obtained at the beginning.
Treatment:
Other: Hypopressive intervention
Control group
No Intervention group
Description:
A control group (CG): that will not be subjected to treatment, which will be evaluated in the pre and post phase of the study, and a follow-up by telephone contact of adherence to physical activity. The participants assigned to this group will receive general advice on the positive effects of the regular practice of physical activity aimed at preventing urinary incontinence, and they will be given the guide of recommendations for the promotion of physical activity.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Agustín Aibar Almazán

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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