Pelvic floor muscle training increases pelvic floor muscle strength more in post-menopausal women who are not using hormone therapy than in women who are using hormone therapy: a randomised trial

Antonio, Flavia Ignacio; Herbert, Robert D.; Bo, Kari; Japur Sa Rosa-e-Silva, Ana Carolina; Silva Lara, Lucia Alves; Franco, Maira de Menezes; Jorge Ferreira, Cristine Homsi

Abstract

Question: Are there differences in the effectiveness of pelvic floor muscle training on pelvic floor muscle strength and urinary incontinence symptoms in postmenopausal women who are and are not using hormone therapy? Design: Randomised, controlled trial with concealed allocation, blinded assessors, and intention-to-treat analysis. Participants: Ninety-nine postmenopausal women, 38 of whom were using daily systemic oestrogen/progestogen therapy. Intervention: The experimental group (n = 51) received an intensive supervised pelvic floor muscle training protocol, and the control group (n = 48) received no intervention. The randomisation was stratified by hormone therapy use. Outcome measures: Change in pelvic floor muscle strength assessed with manometry at 12 weeks. Prevalence and severity of urinary incontinence symptoms were assessed using questionnaires. Results: Eighty-eight women provided data that could be included in the analysis. Pelvic floor muscle training increased pelvic floor muscle strength by 8.0 cmH(2)O (95% CI 3.4 to 12.6) in women not using hormone therapy and by -0.9 cmH(2)O (95% CI -6.5 to 4.8) in women using hormone therapy (interaction p = 0.018). A sensitivity analysis showed that the greater training effect in women who were not using hormone therapy was still apparent if the analysis was conducted on percentage change in strength rather than absolute change in strength. There was also a significantly greater effect of training in women not using hormone therapy on prevalence of urinary incontinence symptoms (ratio of odds ratios = 7.4; interaction p = 0.028). The difference in effects on severity of urinary incontinence symptoms was not statistically significant (interaction p = 0.37). Conclusion: Pelvic floor muscle training increases pelvic floor muscle strength more in women who are not using hormone therapy than in women using hormone therapy. (C) 2018 Australian Physiotherapy Association. Published by Elsevier B.V.

Más información

Título según WOS: ID WOS:000436637600004 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: JOURNAL OF PHYSIOTHERAPY
Volumen: 64
Número: 3
Editorial: AUSTRALIAN PHYSIOTHERAPY ASSOC
Fecha de publicación: 2018
Página de inicio: 166
Página final: 171
DOI:

10.1016/j.jphys.2018.05.002

Notas: ISI