ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

The Effects of Vaginal Tampon Training Added to Pelvic Floor Muscle Training in Stress Urinary Incontinence

H

Hacettepe University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Stress Urinary Incontinence

Treatments

Behavioral: Pelvic Floor Muscle Training
Behavioral: Vaginal Tampon Training

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02924740
GO 16/506-18

Details and patient eligibility

About

Pelvic Floor Muscle Training (PFMT) is the basis of conservative treatment in women with SUI. In systematic reviews, PFMT was recommended as a first option for treatment of SUI. The aim of PFMT is to improve sphincter activity and increase the support of bladder and urethra. Recommendations regarding the prevention and treatment of SUI with PFMT include Knack maneuver (the conscious contraction of the pelvic floor before and during the abdominal pressure increases); pelvic floor exercises to enhance the structural support and endurance of pelvic floor muscles; adding transversus abdominis contraction; and functional rehabilitation.It was reported that the progressive overload principle should be considered to improve the muscle strength and endurance. According to this principal, resistance against to movement, duration and/or frequency should be increased to obtain the optimal response. There are a lot of methods to run a muscle or muscle group based on the progressive overload principal. These are adding resistance or weight, increasing the duration and number of contraction, changing the type of exercise and the range of movement. In the literature, it was reported that special vaginal or rectal tools, vaginal cones or tampons might be used to establish resistance during the pelvic floor muscle exercises.the use of cones in a different way may provide extra benefit for patients: patients can be instructed to perform pelvic floor muscle contraction and try to pull the cone or the other tools out of the vagina. In this study, investigators preferred to use vaginal tampons since pulling the cone out of the vagina cause the elimination of the weight of the cone. Vaginal tampons are also sterile, hygienic, and single use. There is no study investigates the effects of vaginal tampon exercises in the literature. Therefore, the aim of this study is to investigate the effect of the vaginal tampon training adding to PFMT on symptoms of the urinary incontinence, the strength and the endurance of pelvic floor muscles and the quality of life.

Full description

Urinary incontinence (UI) is defined by the International Urogynecological Association and the International Continence Society (IUGA/ICS) as a complaint of involuntary loss of urine which is objectively shown and causing hygienic and social problems. Stress urinary incontinence (SUI) is defined as involuntary loss of urine on effort or physical exertion, or on sneezing or coughing. Pelvic Floor Muscle Training (PFMT) is the basis of conservative treatment in women with SUI. In systematic reviews, PFMT was recommended as a first option for treatment of SUI. The aim of PFMT is to improve sphincter activity and increase the support of bladder and urethra. Recommendations regarding the prevention and treatment of SUI with PFMT include Knack maneuver (the conscious contraction of the pelvic floor before and during the abdominal pressure increases); pelvic floor exercises to enhance the structural support and endurance of pelvic floor muscles; adding transversus abdominis contraction; and functional rehabilitation. It was reported that the progressive overload principle should be considered to improve the muscle strength and endurance. According to this principal, resistance against to movement, duration and/or frequency should be increased to obtain the optimal response. There are a lot of methods to run a muscle or muscle group based on the progressive overload principal. These are adding resistance or weight, increasing the duration and number of contraction, changing the type of exercise and the range of movement. In the literature, it was reported that special vaginal or rectal tools, vaginal cones or tampons might be used to establish resistance during the pelvic floor muscle exercises. It was found that the effect of exercises applying with a device was similar with PFMT in women with SUI and mixed type UI. Vaginal cones are weights that put into the vagina. The theory of the use of vaginal cones is that when the feeling of slipping is perceived, reflex or voluntary contraction of pelvic floor muscles occur to avoid this slipping. It was reported that the use of cones should be questioned in terms of exercise physiology. Holding the cone for 15-20 minutes may result in decreased blood supply, decreased oxygen consumption, muscle fatigue and pain, and contraction of other muscle. On the other hand, the use of cones in a different way may provide extra benefit for patients: patients can be instructed to perform pelvic floor muscle contraction and try to pull the cone or the other tools out of the vagina. In this study, investigators preferred to use vaginal tampons since pulling the cone out of the vagina cause the elimination of the weight of cone. Vaginal tampons are also sterile, hygienic, and single use. There is also no study investigates the effects of vaginal tampon exercises in the literature. Therefore, the aim of this study is to investigate the effect of the vaginal tampon training adding to PFMT on symptoms of the urinary incontinence, the strength and the endurance of pelvic floor muscles and the quality of life. Vaginal tampon training will be applied for 5 days a week for 12 weeks. Vaginal tampon exercises will be performed two days a week by physiotherapist (first author) and three days a week by patients. One set of tampon exercises consist 15 contractions. During vaginal tampon training, from week 1 to week 12, patients were instructed to perform two sets of exercises for five days a week (two days by physiotherapist, three days by themselves). Both groups will complete PFMT consisting of fast (2 second) and slow contractions (5-s contraction, 10-s hold, 5-s relaxation, totally 20-s). One set of exercises includes ten fast and ten slow voluntary PFM contractions (VPFMCs). During week 1 and 2, participants will be instructed to perform two sets of exercises per day (20 fast and 20 slow contractions per day), which was progressively increased by two sets: four sets per day at week 3 and 4 (40 fast and 40 slow contractions per day); six sets per day at week 5 and 6 (60 fast and 60 slow contractions per day); eight sets per day at week 7 and 8 (80 fast and 80 slow contractions per day); ten sets per day from week 9 to week 12 (100 fast and 100 slow contractions per day). Patients were advised to exercise while in the supine, seated, and upright positions and to integrate these exercises into their daily activities, e.g., while watching television, waiting for something, traveling.

Enrollment

48 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18 to 65 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • having symptoms of SUI according to MESA urinary incontinence questionnaire; age>18 and < 65 years; having the ability of pelvic floor muscle contraction, being free of UI medications for at least 4 weeks before the start of the study; and sufficient literacy to complete required forms and urinary diaries and perform training protocols.

Exclusion criteria

  • antenatal or postnatal women (up to 3 months after delivery), women with persistent urinary tract infections, impaired mental state, Stage 3 and 4 pelvic organ prolapse (POP), neurological disorders, and who received concurrent or recent physiotherapy intervention (within the last year).

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

48 participants in 2 patient groups

control
Active Comparator group
Description:
pelvic floor muscle training
Treatment:
Behavioral: Pelvic Floor Muscle Training
intervention
Experimental group
Description:
vaginal tampon training.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Pelvic Floor Muscle Training
Behavioral: Vaginal Tampon Training

Trial contacts and locations

1

Loading...

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems