View clinical trials related to Sexual Function.
Filter by:This study aims to examine the effects of Pelvic Floor Muscle Training (PFMT) combined with yoga on relieving genitourinary symptoms, symptom-related quality of life, and improving sexual function in women with breast cancer. This study is a parallel randomized study with two groups. Women will be assigned to the experimental or control group by using the block randomization method. The experimental group will receive regular care and a 12-week program of PFMT and yoga. The control group will receive regular care. We collect relevant data from both groups at baseline and 4, 8, 12, and 24 weeks after baseline during the study period.
In France, more than 62 000 hysterectomies are performed each year. Female sexual function is the result of multiple psychological, social and physiological factors. There is no information in the current literature about the optimum time between the surgery and the sexual relation resumption. The primary outcome is to assess the impact of advising time between hysterectomy and sexual relation resumption by using FSFI® score. Secondaries outcomes are: to describe and compare post-operative complications in the two groups of the study, to describe the follow-up of the recommendation concerning time between surgery and sexual relation resumption and to describe why this recommendation was not followed. This study is based on 4 questionnaires: FSFI® pre-operative and post-operative, pre-operative questionnaire and post-operative questionnaire. This is a monocentric, comparative, of superiority, randomised and prospective study. Patients are randomised into two groups: sexual relation resumption advised 4 weeks after surgery, or 8 weeks. The inclusion criteria are more than 18 years, francophone, in sexual activity, scheduled for a total hysterectomy for benign indication (menometrorrhagia, fibroma, adenomyosis, endometriosis, pelvic floor disorders, low-grade endometrial cancer), considering vaginal, laparoscopic and abdominal approach, and a written consent. Non-inclusion criteria are illiteracy, cognitive disorders, without social security, deprived liberty by judicial or administrative decision, psychiatric care, patient with legal protection, patient incapable of giving consent. If our conclusions confirmed our hypothesis, it can improve clinical practices by providing additional informations for surgeon and patient, to undergo this surgery as serenely as possible.