Painless fix treats pelvic floor dysfunction

"Most women are embarrassed to talk about these types of problems, or they don't think there is anything anyone can do to help them," says Julie Starr. "Some women have been to multiple providers without relief of their symptoms, so they become discouraged and give up. A nurse practitioner who provides pelvic floor therapy will focus on decreasing all of the patients' unpleasant pelvic symptoms instead of referring them to multiple providers." (Credit: BB/Flickr)

Researchers have demonstrated that a comprehensive, nonsurgical treatment significantly improves symptoms in women with pelvic floor dysfunction (PFD).

One in three women suffer from PFD, a range of symptoms that includes bladder and bowel problems as well as pelvic pain, according to the American Urogynecologic Society.

“Pelvic floor rehabilitation is effective in helping women overcome pelvic floor problems with little or no medication,” says Julie Starr, a doctoral student in the Sinclair School of Nursing and a family nurse practitioner at the University of Missouri Women’s Health Center.

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“The treatment involves muscle strengthening for improved bladder control and muscle relaxation for those with symptoms of constipation and pelvic pain.”

Starr and colleagues analyzed data from nearly 800 women with symptoms of pelvic floor dysfunction who underwent therapy for bowel, urinary, or pelvic pain, and sexual dysfunction. The researchers found patients who completed at least five comprehensive pelvic floor rehabilitation therapy sessions reported an average of 80 percent improvement in three main areas: urinary incontinence, defecatory dysfunction, and pelvic pain.

“We attribute the success of our program to patients’ regular contact with health care providers who provide biofeedback and vaginal electrogalvanic (e-stim) therapy as well as advice on behavior modification,” Starr says.

“The e-stim therapy, a painless treatment in which a stimulator is used to send electrical pulses to relax pelvic muscles, improves symptoms of bladder and bowel incontinence as well as pelvic pain and pain with intercourse. We rarely prescribe medications for these complaints; in fact, many women are able to stop taking their medications for bladder control and pain after therapy.”

Starr says women of any age with bladder, bowel, or pelvic pain symptoms could benefit from pelvic floor rehabilitation, as could women who experience tearing after vaginal deliveries.

“Most women are embarrassed to talk about these types of problems, or they don’t think there is anything anyone can do to help them,” Starr says. “Some women have been to multiple providers without relief of their symptoms, so they become discouraged and give up. A nurse practitioner who provides pelvic floor therapy will focus on decreasing all of the patients’ unpleasant pelvic symptoms instead of referring them to multiple providers.”

Many women are offered medication to treat their symptoms and are not aware that alternative treatment methods exist for their pelvic pain, Starr says.

“Non-operative management of pelvic floor dysfunction is a safe and effective way to overcome many pelvic floor complaints,” Starr says. “Medication and surgical management are options that always will be available if pelvic floor rehabilitation does not provide the desired relief.”

The study is published in Female Pelvic Medicine & Reconstructive Surgery.

Source: University of Missouri