Dysfunctional Voiding Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Role of Abdominal and Pelvic Floor Retraining in Children With Dysfunctional Voiding
According to the 2016 International Children's Continence Society standardization of terminology of lower urinary tract function in children, dysfunctional voiding (DV) is a "urodynamic entity characterized by an intermittent and/or fluctuating uroflow rate due to involuntary intermittent contractions of the striated muscle of the external urethral sphincter or pelvic floor during voiding in neurologically normal individuals" . Symptoms vary from mild daytime frequency and urgency to daytime and nighttime wetting, pelvic holding maneuvers, voiding difficulties, urinary tract infections and vesicoureteral reflux (VUR). There are several ways of treating DV, including urotherapy, pharmacotherapy, surgery in the most severe cases, and even Botulinum toxin type A application in certain children. ''Urotherapy'' stands for non-surgical, non-pharmacologic treatment of lower urinary tract function and can be defined as a bladder re-education or rehabilitation program aiming at correction of filling and voiding difficulties. It involves the change of habits that a child has acquired during the period of toilet training and the development of motor control of the micturition reflex. Urotherapy starts with both parental and child education about the importance of regular hydratation and voiding, constipation treatment and genital hygiene. Together with this standard treatment, the pelvic floor muscle (PFM) retraining is initiated, and it includes pelvic floor exercises and various forms of biofeedback (visual, tactile, auditory, electromyography) with the same aim in mind - to help the child establish pelvic floor awareness and control, and relearn pelvic floor muscle relaxation. During the past decade, it has been shown that the PFMs are not an isolated unit, but a part of the abdominal capsule, which they form together with the diaphragm, superficial and deep abdominal muscles. As lower abdominal and PFM act synergistically, it is important that both be relaxed during voiding. Diaphragmatic breathing exercises are easy to learn and serve to teach the children abdominal relaxation.
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