Effectiveness of Video Conferencing in Urinary Incontinence

NCT ID: NCT05154760

Last Updated: 2024-03-25

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

32 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2021-11-30

Study Completion Date

2023-12-01

Brief Summary

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Telerehabilitation (TR) refers to the provision of rehabilitation services through information and communication technologies. The most widely used of these technologies are applications such as telephone and video conferencing.

Urinary incontinence is defined as involuntary urinary incontinence ). This condition, which affects both sexes, is more common in women. Urinary incontinence is caused by dysfunction in the bladder and pelvic floor muscles in women during menopause, childbirth, or pregnancy. Urinary incontinence is a health problem that significantly affects people's social interactions, interests, and psychosocial status. It has been shown that even mild incontinence complaints cause a decrease in the quality of life in women.

Pelvic floor muscle training is one of the conservative treatment methods used in the treatment of urinary incontinence.Adding breathing exercises and deep abdominal muscle strengthening exercises to pelvic floor muscle training may be beneficial in patients with urinary incontinence.

In patients with urinary incontinence, women who are in regular communication with the supervisor during pelvic floor muscle training are more likely to gain higher from the program. However, it has not been shown that group physiotherapy is less effective than physiotherapy administered individually in reducing incontinence episodes. In the light of this information in the literature, our research hypothesis is that in patients with urinary incontinence, follow-up the pelvic floor muscle training, breathing exercise, and core exercise training with individually video conference method can have positive effects on patients' muscle strength, incontinence degree, quality of life, patient satisfaction, exercise adherence, and sexual function.

Detailed Description

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During the COVID-19 pandemic in the world, telerehabilitation methods are widely used in order to ensure the continuity of patients' access to health services, as well as to reduce the likelihood of both health personnel and the patient catching the disease. Telerehabilitation (TR) refers to the provision of rehabilitation services through information and communication technologies. Information and communication technologies include secure messaging services and e-mail services, but new applications such as wearable, virtual reality and activity trackers are increasingly used in healthcare. On the other hand, real-time applications, where information is instantly exchanged between all users by telephone and video conferencing, are the most common of information and communication technologies.

Urinary incontinence is defined as the complaint of involuntary urinary incontinence. This condition, which affects both sexes, is more common in women. Urinary incontinence is caused by the disruption of the continence mechanism as a result of prostate enlargement or prostate cancer in men; In women, it is due to dysfunction in the bladder and pelvic floor muscles that occur during menopause, childbirth or pregnancy. urinary incontinence; It is classified as stress incontinence, urge incontinence, mixed type incontinence, overflow incontinence and functional incontinence. In a study conducted in our country, it was reported that stress type incontinence is the most common type of incontinence. Stress type incontinence is followed by mixed type incontinence and urge type incontinence, respectively. Urinary incontinence is a health problem that significantly affects people's social interactions, interests and psychosocial status. Studies have shown that even mild incontinence complaints cause a decrease in the quality of life in women.

Conservative treatment, pharmacological treatment and surgical interventions are used in the treatment of urinary incontinence. Pelvic floor muscle training is one of the conservative treatment methods used in the treatment of urinary incontinence. Studies in the literature have reported that pelvic floor muscle training should be included in the primary care program in women with stress or any type of incontinence, and this training causes less urinary incontinence, less urine in the pad test, and patients empty their bladders less frequently during the day. It has been shown that the pelvic floor muscles work synergistically with the diaphragm and abdominal muscles to control respiration and changes in intra-abdominal pressure. Therefore, it has been reported in the literature that adding breathing exercises and deep abdominal muscle strengthening exercises to pelvic floor muscle training in patients with urinary incontinence may be beneficial.

When the studies are examined, the programs that include pelvic floor muscle training are quite variable. Different methods were used in order to increase the effectiveness of the applied muscle training program and the adherence of the patients to the program. One of these applied methods is telerehabilitation applications. It has been shown that pelvic floor muscle training can be applied safely and effectively with telehealth applications, and significant improvements are achieved in stress incontinence and mixed type incontinence types with these applications. It has been reported that these technological methods are advantageous in order to ensure continuity of treatment without leaving the house during the pandemic process.

Women with regular contact with the supervisor during pelvic floor muscle training in patients with urinary incontinence are more likely to report their recovery. However, group physiotherapy has not been shown to be less effective than individual physiotherapy in reducing incontinence episodes. In the light of this information in the literature, pelvic floor muscle training, breathing exercise and core exercises performed individually with video conference monitoring, which is one of the telerehabilitation methods in patients with urinary incontinence, on muscle strength, incontinence degree, pelvic floor muscle thickness, symptoms on quality of life, patient satisfaction, exercise. We have established our hypothesis in terms of positive effects on commitment and sexual life. Therefore, the aim of this study is; The aim of this study is to compare the effectiveness of group video conferencing method and individual video conferencing method on urinary incontinence in patients with urinary incontinence.

Conditions

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Urinary Incontinence,Stress Telerehabilitation Pelvic Floor Muscle Training Videoconferencing

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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one on one video conference

Pelvic floor muscle training, diaphragmatic breathing exercise, core strengthening exercise will continue for 8 weeks. Participants will be asked to practice the exercises at least 4 days in a week, and the program will be continued in the form of one on one interviews with video conference method once a week.

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

Pelvic floor muscle training, diaphragmatic breathing exercise, core exercises

Intervention Type OTHER

An exercise program consisting of pelvic floor muscle training, diaphragmatic breathing exercise and core exercises will be applied to the patients.

group videoconference

Pelvic floor muscle training, diaphragmatic breathing exercise, core strengthening exercise will continue for 8 weeks. Participants will be asked to practice the exercises at least 4 days in a week, and the program will be continued in the form of group interviews with video conference method once a week.

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

Pelvic floor muscle training, diaphragmatic breathing exercise, core exercises

Intervention Type OTHER

An exercise program consisting of pelvic floor muscle training, diaphragmatic breathing exercise and core exercises will be applied to the patients.

Interventions

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Pelvic floor muscle training, diaphragmatic breathing exercise, core exercises

An exercise program consisting of pelvic floor muscle training, diaphragmatic breathing exercise and core exercises will be applied to the patients.

Intervention Type OTHER

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* 18-65 aged
* BMI 18-30 kg/m2
* Being diagnosed with stress incontinence or mixed incontinence (dominantly SUI)
* Mild or moderate incontinence (mild SUI; urinary incontinence with coughing, sneezing, laughing, or any strenuous activity. Moderate; urinary incontinence with carrying, pushing, lifting, walking, and any light physical activity)

Exclusion Criteria

* Pregnancy
* Ongoing vulvovaginitis or urinary tract infection or malignancy
* Pelvic floor muscle strength is between 0-1 according to the Modified Oxford Scale,
* Previous surgery for SUI
* Problems with vision or inability to understand given commands
* Conservative therapy in the last 6 months
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

65 Years

Eligible Sex

FEMALE

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Marmara University

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Locations

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Berivan Beril Kılıç

Istanbul, , Turkey (Türkiye)

Site Status

Countries

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Turkey (Türkiye)

References

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Provided Documents

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Document Type: Study Protocol and Statistical Analysis Plan

View Document

Other Identifiers

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urinary incontinence

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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