Can you breathe yourself to a better pelvic floor? A systematic review

Author:

Bø Kari12ORCID,Driusso Patricia3ORCID,Jorge Cristine Homsi4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Sports Medicine Norwegian School of Sport Sciences Oslo Norway

2. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology Akershus University Hospital Lørenskog Norway

3. Women's Health Research Laboratory, Physical Therapy Department Universidade Federal de São Carlos São Carlos Brazil

4. Departament of Health Science, Graduation Program in Rehabilitation and Functional Performance Ribeirão Preto Medical School Ribeirão Preto Brazil

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionSome authors suggest that breathing exercises should be recommended instead of or in combination with pelvic floor muscle training (PFMT) to prevent and treat urinary incontinence (UI) and pelvic organ prolapse (POP).AimsThe primary aim of the present study was to investigate the evidence for breathing as an intervention alone or in addition to PFM contraction in treatment of UI and POP.Materials & MethodsThis systematic review included short‐term experimental studies and randomize controlled trials (RCTs) indexed on PubMed, EMBASE, and PEDro database. A form was used to extract data that was analyzed qualitatively due to the heterogeneity in interventions and outcome measures of the included studies. The individual methodological quality of RCTs was analyzed using the PEDro scale.ResultsA total of 18 studies were included, 374 participants from short‐term experimental studies and 765 from nine RCTs. PEDro score varied from 4 to 8. Activation of the PFM during expiration was significantly less than during a PFM contraction. In general, the RCTs showed that training the PFM is significantly more effective to improve PFM variables and UI and POP than breathing exercises, and that adding breathing exercises to PFMT have no additional effect.ConclusionThis systematic review indicates that the evidence for incorporating breathing exercise in clinical practice in addition to or instead of PFMT is scant or non‐existing, both based on short‐term experimental studies and small RCTs.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Urology,Neurology (clinical)

Reference52 articles.

1. Pelvic floor muscle training versus no treatment, or inactive control treatments, for urinary incontinence in women;Dumoulin C;Cochrane Database Syst Rev,2018

2. National Institute for Health and Care Excellence. NICE guideline. Urinary incontinence and pelvic organ prolapse in women: management [NG123].2019.

3. International urogynecology consultation chapter 3 committee 2; conservative treatment of patient with pelvic organ prolapse: Pelvic floor muscle training

4. Functional anatomy of the female pelvic floor

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