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Successful outcome following a multimodal pelvic rehabilitation program in a woman with neurogenic bladder and bowel dysfunction: A case report.
Physiotherapy Theory and Practice 2022 November 12
BACKGROUND: Neurogenic bladder and bowel dysfunctions lead to physical, social, and emotional disability and affects one's quality of life. Initial treatment is conservative including several rehabilitation techniques such as pelvic floor muscle training, biofeedback, electrical stimulation, and posterior tibial nerve stimulation.
OBJECTIVE: In this case report, a 45-year-old woman with neurogenic bladder and bowel dysfunction was presented.
CASE DESCRIPTION: Her urinary and fecal incontinence symptoms began twenty years before this episode of care, after an incomplete spinal cord injury secondary to spinal ependymoma and syringomyelia. She discontinued medical treatments due to side effects and ceased intermittent catheterization. A multimodal pelvic rehabilitation program was administered consisting of posterior tibial nerve stimulation, active pelvic floor muscle training accompanied by biofeedback, and electrical stimulation of pelvic floor muscles.
OUTCOMES: There were clinically important favorable differences in the scores of King's health questionnaire (reductions in symptom severity from 25 to 18 and in each of the impact of incontinence, physical and social limitations, personal relationships, sleep/energy, and severity measures from 100 to 67), pelvic floor distress inventory (decreased from 257 to 146) and female sexual function index (increased from 15.1 to 25.1) after 12 weeks of a multimodal pelvic rehabilitation program. Manual muscle tests demonstrated improvements in pelvic floor muscle strength and endurance.
CONCLUSION: A 12-week multimodal pelvic rehabilitation program reduced urinary and fecal incontinence symptoms, together with improvements in her sexual life and alleviation of neuropathic pain.
OBJECTIVE: In this case report, a 45-year-old woman with neurogenic bladder and bowel dysfunction was presented.
CASE DESCRIPTION: Her urinary and fecal incontinence symptoms began twenty years before this episode of care, after an incomplete spinal cord injury secondary to spinal ependymoma and syringomyelia. She discontinued medical treatments due to side effects and ceased intermittent catheterization. A multimodal pelvic rehabilitation program was administered consisting of posterior tibial nerve stimulation, active pelvic floor muscle training accompanied by biofeedback, and electrical stimulation of pelvic floor muscles.
OUTCOMES: There were clinically important favorable differences in the scores of King's health questionnaire (reductions in symptom severity from 25 to 18 and in each of the impact of incontinence, physical and social limitations, personal relationships, sleep/energy, and severity measures from 100 to 67), pelvic floor distress inventory (decreased from 257 to 146) and female sexual function index (increased from 15.1 to 25.1) after 12 weeks of a multimodal pelvic rehabilitation program. Manual muscle tests demonstrated improvements in pelvic floor muscle strength and endurance.
CONCLUSION: A 12-week multimodal pelvic rehabilitation program reduced urinary and fecal incontinence symptoms, together with improvements in her sexual life and alleviation of neuropathic pain.
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