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Urethral Hypermobility clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Urethral Hypermobility.

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NCT ID: NCT05272644 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Stress Urinary Incontinence

Efficacy of Biofeedback-Assisted Pelvic Muscle Floor Training and Electrical Stimulation on Women With Stress Urinary Incontinence

Start date: September 16, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The pathophysiological mechanism of stress urinary incontinence divides stress urinary incontinence into urethral hypermobility and intrinsic sphincter deficiency. Pelvic floor muscle exercise as first line therapy has been found to be extremely helpful in patients with mild to moderate forms of incontinence. Biofeedback uses an instrument to record the biological signals ( electrical activity) during a voluntary pelvic floor muscle contraction and present this information back to the woman in auditory or visual form. Electrical stimulation can aid in detecting pelvic floor muscles, and also promote the contraction of the pelvic floor muscles and strengthen the muscles. This study assumes that urinary incontinence women with different pathophysiological classifications receiving a pelvic floor muscle training with surface electromyographic biofeedback and electrical stimulation show differences in the strength of pelvic muscle and degree of symptoms improvement.

NCT ID: NCT04361890 Recruiting - Ultrasound Clinical Trials

Ultrasound and Pelvic Floor Muscle Training

ERP
Start date: January 7, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The objective is to validate the use of ultrasound measurements (urethral mobility, movement of the ano-rectal angle, elastography measurements) in women with urinary incontiennce before and after pelvic floor muscle training (PFMT) : inter and intra-observer reproducibility; correlation with clinical examination (modified Oxford scale); sensitivity to change before/after pelvic floor muscle training