Author unit: 277101 Zaozhuang City, Shandong Province, Zaozhuang Maternal and Child Health Hospital Zhou Guangju: female, junior college, deputy head nurse
Objective: To explore the effect of electrical stimulation of pelvic floor muscles on the improvement of pelvic floor function in women with postpartum urinary incontinence.
Methods: Ninety-six pregnant women who suffered from urinary incontinence after delivery in our department from April 2013 to March 2014 were selected and randomly divided into observation group and control group. The control group received pelvic floor muscle training, and the observation group was given pelvic floor on this basis In electromyography treatment, the pelvic floor muscle tone and urinary incontinence were compared between the two groups after treatment.
Results: After treatment, the resting pressure and systolic blood pressure of the pelvic floor in the observation group were higher than those in the control group, and the duration of pelvic floor contraction was longer than that in the control group. The difference was statistically significant (P<0.05). In the control group, the difference was statistically significant (P <0.05).
Conclusion: Electrical stimulation of pelvic floor muscles promotes the improvement of pelvic floor function in women with postpartum urinary incontinence, which is worthy of clinical promotion.
Early myoelectric stimulation combined with pelvic floor rehabilitation training and meticulous care for postpartum urinary incontinence women will help to better improve the pelvic floor function of the parturients, promote the recovery of pelvic floor muscle tension and the control of urination by the detrusor, thereby Improve urinary incontinence and improve maternal life quality.
Pelvic floor muscle electrical stimulation therapy mainly uses physical stimulation to improve the pelvic floor muscles' contraction and contraction ability, thereby improving muscle atrophy and damage, enhancing the urethral closure ability, and effectively controlling the detrusor function and improving urinary incontinence.
The effect of electrical stimulation of pelvic floor on the pelvic floor function of postpartum urinary incontinence women
Yan Xuewen Liao Yanting
(Department of Gynecology, Bo'ai Hospital, Zhongshan City, Zhongshan, Guangdong 528400)
Objective: To study the effect of electrical stimulation of pelvic floor muscles on the pelvic floor function of postpartum urinary incontinence women.
Methods: Ninety-six women with postpartum urinary incontinence from January 2016 to January 2017 were selected and divided into two groups by random number table. The routine group received routine pelvic floor muscle training; the comprehensive group received pelvic floor electromyography on the basis of the routine group stimulate. The duration of pelvic floor contraction, vaginal muscle strength, different muscle fiber fatigue indexes, total effective rate of urinary incontinence treatment, pelvic floor resting pressure and systolic pressure before and after treatment were compared between the two groups.
Results: The total effective rate of urinary incontinence treatment in the comprehensive group was significantly higher than that in the conventional group, P<0.05. Before treatment, the pelvic floor resting pressure and systolic blood pressure were similar in the two groups, p>0.05. After treatment, the pelvic floor resting pressure and systolic pressure of the comprehensive group were significantly higher than those of the conventional group, P<0.05; the duration of pelvic floor contraction, vaginal muscle strength, and different muscle fiber fatigue indexes were significantly better than those of the conventional group, P<0.05.
Conclusion: Pelvic floor myoelectric stimulation can effectively increase the resting pressure and systolic pressure of the pelvic floor of postpartum urinary incontinence women, extend the duration of pelvic floor contraction, reduce muscle fiber fatigue, improve vaginal muscle strength, and promote the recovery of urinary incontinence. It is worthy of promotion.
Pelvic floor muscle electrical stimulation can achieve dual stimulation of the urethra and bladder to ensure the correct contraction of the pelvic floor muscles. Combining it with conventional pelvic floor muscle training therapy can effectively overcome the defects of a single pelvic floor muscle routine training and improve the therapeutic effect.