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Pelvic Floor Muscle Contraction During a Cough and Decreased Vesical Neck Mobility
59
Citations
15
References
2001
Year
Interventional PulmonologyTopographical AnatomyVoluntary ContractionClinical AnatomySurgeryGross AnatomyKinesiologyPelvic Floor DisordersApplied PhysiologyTracheobronchitisPhysical MedicineHealth SciencesSpinal Cord InjuryLarynxPulmonary MedicineBrief ObjectivePelvic NeurologyPhysical TherapyVesical Neck MobilityExercise PhysiologyPulmonary PhysiologyElectromyographyLung MechanicsMedicineCoordinate SystemNeuromusculoskeletal DisorderAnesthesiology
In Brief Objective To test the hypothesis that a voluntary pelvic muscle contraction initiated in preparation for a cough, a maneuver we call the Knack, significantly reduces vesical neck displacement. Methods A convenience sample of 22 women consisted of 11 young, continent nulliparas (mean age [± standard deviation] 24.8 ± 7.0 years) and 11 older, incontinent paras (mean age [±SD] 66.9 ± 3.9 years). With the use of perineal ultrasound, we quantified vesical neck displacement at rest and during coughs using caliper tracing and a coordinate system. The subjects coughed with and without voluntary pelvic floor muscle contraction. Results Vesical neck mobility during coughs was significantly decreased when voluntary contraction was used: from a median (range) of 5.4 (20.0) mm without volitional contraction to 2.9 (18.3) mm with volitional contraction (P < .001). The younger women demonstrated a median (range) decrease in excursion from 4.6 (19.5) to 0.0 (17.0) mm (P = .007), and the older incontinent women demonstrated a median (range) decrease from 6.2 (10.0) to 3.5 (15.4) mm (P = .003). At rest, the median vesical neck position in the group of older incontinent women was significantly further dorsocaudal (P = .001) than in the younger women. Conclusion A pelvic floor muscle contraction in preparation for, and throughout, a cough can augment proximal urethra support during stress, thereby reducing the amount of dorsocaudal displacement. Volitionally contracting the pelvic floor muscles in preparation for a cough decreases vesical neck mobility in both young continent and older incontinent women.
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