Introduction to the Pelvic Floor
Download
Report
Transcript Introduction to the Pelvic Floor
Introduction to Pelvic Floor
Physical Therapy
Presented by:
Carin Cappadocia, PT, DPT
April 18, 2015
Objectives
Identify pelvic floor muscles and their functions
2. Differentiate diagnoses of pelvic pain vs. incontinence
symptoms
3. Explain universal precautions, contraindications,
indications for pelvic floor muscle examination and
treatments
4. Understand pelvic floor muscle relaxation and
strengthening techniques
1.
What is the Pelvic Floor?
“All visceral, neurovascular, and myofascial structures
contained in the bony pelvis from pubis to coccyx and
between lateral ischial walls” – APTA SOWH
Function of the Pelvic Floor Muscles
1. Support
2. Sphincteric
3. Sexual Function
4. Trunk and Pelvic Stabilization
5. Lymphatic
Bony Landmarks
http://classconnection.s3.amazonaws.com/551/flashcards/1673551/png/screen_shot_2014-03-07_at_40412_pm-1449E5C571029BC2ABD.png
Female Perineum
http://iahealth.net/vagina/
First Layer Pelvic Floor Muscles
Ischiocavernosus (S2,3,4)
O: Ischial tuberosity and ramus
I: Inferolateral apponeurosis over cura of clitoris/penis
A: Erection (clitoral, penile)
Bulbocavernosus/Bulbospongiosus (S2,3,4)
O: Central perineal tendon, (F) Palpable under labia
(M) Midline Scrotum
I: Fascia over the (F) Corpus cavernosum of the clitoris
(M) Shaft of Penis
A: (F) Vaginal Sphincter and clitoral erection
(M) Penile Erection
First Layer Muscles
Superficial Transverse Perineal Muscle (S2,3,4)
O: Ischial Tuberosity
I: Central perinal tendon/Perineal Body
A: Pelvic Floor Stability
External Anal Sphincter
O: Perineal Body
I: Partial coccyx and surrounds anal canal
A: Voluntary opening of anal orifice
First Layer Pelvic Floor Muscles
Female
Second Layer Pelvic Floor Muscles
Sphincter Urethra (S2-4)
Compressor Urethrae (S2, 3, 4)
O: Inferior pubic arch and wraps
O:B Ischiopubic ramus
around the urethra
A: Urethral constriction and
relaxation
I: Joins to opposite side and passes
Urethrovaginal Sphincter
O: Vaginal wall
I: Superior surface of urethra
A: Compresses urethra and assists
in continence
anterior to urethra and vaginal
wall
A: Compresses urethra and vagina
Deep Transverse Perineal (S 2,3,4)
O: Inferior Rami of ischium
I: Deep transverse perineum of
opposite side (through perineum)
A: Stabilize pelvic floor
Second Layer Pelvic Floor Muscles
http://quizlet.com/8113450/gimner-urogenital-triangle-flash-cards/
Third Layer Pelvic Floor Muscles
Levator Ani
Puborectalis*
Pubococcygeus
Iliococcygeus
Coccygeus*
Levator Ani
Puborectalis (S2,3,4)
O: Posterior pubis and fascia
Iliococcygeus (S3,4)
O: ArchusTendineus Levator Ani
of obtuator internus
(ATLA)
I: Anococcygeal ligament,
I: Anococcygeal body and coccyx
around rectum and anal canal
A: Visceral and lateral coccyx
A: Voluntary sphincter of anal
support
canal
Coccygeus [Ischiococcygeus]
Pubococcygeus (S3,4,5)
O: Posterior pubis and fascia
of obtuator Internus
I: Anococcygeal ligament
A: Pelvic visceral support
(S4,5)
O: Ischial Spine and Sacrospinous
ligament
I: Lower sacrum and coccyx
A: Visceral support, Coccyx
mobility (flex), stability of SI joint
Accessory Muscles
• Piriformis (L5,S1,2)
O: Sacral border, through greater sciatic foramen
I: Superior border of the greater trochanter of the
femur
A: Lateral hip rotation
• Obturator Internus (L5,S1,2)
O: Internal aspect of pelvic foramen
I: Medial greater trochanter of femur, proximal to
trochanteric fossa
A: Lateral hip rotation
http://web.uni-plovdiv.bg/stu1104541018/docs/res/anatomy_atlas_-_Patrick_W._Tank/6%20-%20The%20Pelvis%20and%20Perineum.htm
Pudendal Nerve
Pudendal Nerve divides
into 3 branches:
Inferior rectal branch
Perineal branch
(sometimes divided into
deep and superficial)
Dorsal branch of the
clitoris/penis
http://www.pudendalhope.info/node/13#Female_Pudendal_Nerve
Male Pudendal Nerve
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pudendal_nerve#mediaviewer/File:Pudendal_nerve.svg
Organs in Relation to Pelvic Floor
http://my.clevelandclinic.org/services/ob-gyn-womens-health/diseases-conditions/pelvic-organ-prolapse
http://www.mendoza-massoer.dk/primal/primal_13.jpg
Normal Urinary Function
Takes 3-4 hours to fill bladder
Normal day time voiding 6-8 times per day
Void Stream Duration: 8-10 seconds
Nocturia: 1 times per night (1-2x/ ages 65+)
Sensory receptors notify brain when bladder is full
Capacity: Max. ~600mL
Pearson BD, 1992
Pelvic Floor Muscle
Dysfunctions and Diagnoses
Mobility vs. Stability Concept
Too Much Stability/Fixation
Pain
Incontinence
Retention
Too Much Mobility
Prolapse
Incontinence
Overactive Pelvic Floor
Dyspareunia
Vulvodynia
Dysuria
Vaginismus
Chronic Urinary Tract
Infections
Overactive bladder*
Edwards, 2015
Haefner, 2007
Basson et al, 2000
Interstitial Cystitis (IC)
Pudendal Neuralgia
Physical Therapy and Vulvodynia
McKay et al, 2001
N=29 women with moderate to severe Vulvodynia
Biofeedback and manual assessment of pelvic floor monthly
with home portable biofeedback unit with daily pelvic floor
muscle training exercises
Post Treatment, 20/29 patients (69%) had a significant decrease
in introital tenderness and were able to resume sexual activity
Physical Therapy and Vaginismus
Seo et al, 2005
N=12 patients with primary vaginismus
Biofeedback and electrical stimulation assisted
pelvic floor muscle training followed by manual
therapy and use of vaginal dialators
12/12 were able to participate in painfree
vaginal intercourse
Pudendal Neuralgia
“Pudendal neuralgia is a painful, neuropathic condition
involving the dermatome of the pudendal nerve” – Hibner
et al, 2010
Parasthesias and/or pain throughout any portion of the
pudendal dermatome
may extend into the groin, abdomen, legs, and buttocks
Hibner, 2010
Pudendal Neuralgia
Causes
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
Pelvic surgery especially
with use of mesh
Pelvic trauma
Childbirth
Bicycle riding
Prolonged sitting
Constipation
Severe tightness
(muscle and fascial
restrictions)
Treatments
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Physical Therapy is the
gold standard treatment
in patients with muscle
spasms
Behavioral modifications
Medical Therapy
Botox Injections
Steroid Injections
Surgery
Underactive Pelvic Floor
Potential Related Diagnoses
Urinary Incontinence
Pelvic Organ Prolapse
Urinary Incontinence
Stress Urinary Incontinence
Episodes of urinary leakage with increased valsalva or stress;
such as cough, laugh, sneeze
Urge Incontinence
Episodes of urinary leakage with severe sense of urgency
Mixed Incontinence
Symptoms of both Stress and Urge Incontinence
Incontinence without Sensory Awareness
http://www.iuga.org/
Urinary Incontinence
Dannecker et al, 2005
“EMG-biofeedback assisted pelvic floor muscle training
is an effective therapy of stress urinary or mixed
incontinence: a 7-year experience with 390 patients”
390 women; stress incontinence (80%), mixed (20%)
263 completed the training
Self reported improvement was 95%
Statistically significant improvement of the stress provocation
test (Cough Test)
Long term follow-up (average follow up time 2.8 years)
71% self-reported persisting improvement of UI
13% underwent incontinence surgery following completion
of conservative therapy
Pelvic Organ Prolapse
A dropping of one or more organs into or out of
the vagina; from a weakening of muscles,
ligaments, and fascia.
Causes
Pregnancy and child birth
Aging and menopause
Conditions that cause increased pressure on the pelvic floor
Genetics
Underactive pelvic floor
http://www.iuga.org/
Pelvic Organ Prolapse
Symptoms:
Pelvic or low back Heaviness
Feeling of a bulge in or out of the vagina
Change in urinary symptoms: Slowed stream,
incomplete emptying, urgency, frequency,
incontinence
Bowel Symptoms: difficulty emptying bowels,
incomplete emptying, the need to Splint
Discomfort with sexual activity
http://www.iuga.org/
Types of Prolapse
Cystocele
Uterine Prolapse
Rectocele
Enterocele
Rectal Prolapse
Cystocele
http://www.lifescript.com/health/centers/pms/related_conditions/cystocele-rectocele.aspx
Uterine Prolapse
https://biotextiles.wordpress.com/prolapse-repair-mesh/
Rectocele
Copyright © Nucleus Medical Media, Inc.
Enterocele
Rectal Prolapse
Pelvic Organ Prolapse
Braekken et al, 2011
“ Can pelvic floor muscle training revere pelvic organ
prolapse and reduce prolapse symptoms? An
assessor-blinded, randomized, control trial”
n= 109 women
PFM Training: (n=59) Prolapse Sages I,II,III; Control (n=50)
comparing PFMT and lifestyle advise versus lifestyle
advise alone
Short Term Effects: 19% of women with PFMT
improved 1 stage on the POPQ verses 8% of controls
6 Months: PFMT had significantly greater elevation of
the bladder and rectum and reduced frequency than
the control group.
Pelvic Floor Physical Therapy
Indications for Pelvic Floor Examination
Urinary and Fecal Incontinence
Abdominopelvic surgery
Urinary Urgency/Frequency
Incomplete Bowel Evacuation
Dysfunctional Voiding
Constipation
Dysuria
Postpartum
Recurrent Urinary Tract
Pregnancy Related
Infections
Dyschezia (Pain with defecation)
Pelvic Pain
Abdominal Pain
Lumbosacral Pain
Hip Pain
Pelvic Organ Prolapse
Musculoskeletal
Pain/Dysfunction
Infertility
Contraindications and Precautions
Lack of patient or physician
Severe atrophic vaginitis
consent
Under 6 weeks PostPartum
Under 6 weeks Post-Op
(except abdominal
exploratory surgery)
History of sexual abuse
Children under the age of 5
2010 Herman and Wallace Rehabilitation Institute PF1
or anyone without prior
medical examination
So What Do We Do????
Evaluation (Average 60 Min)
Detailed History Taking
Question bowel/bladder/sexual history regardless of diagnosis
Abdominopelvic surgical history
Orthopedic history
Gross Assessment of Posture and Gait
External Soft Tissue Palpation
Muscles: Abdominals, iliopsoas, gluteals, piriformis, hamstrings,
ITB, TFL
Connective tissue: abdomen, gluteals,
posterior/anterior/medial/lateral thigh, lumbar region
Muscle Length Testing
Evaluation (continued)
Gross Lumbar and Hip ROM and MMT
Special Tests
Pelvic Floor Muscle Assessment
Observation
External palpation
Contraction/lengthening observation
Reflex
Internal palpation
MMT
Prolapse/vaginal wall stability assessment
Biofeedback assessment
Treatments
Manual Therapy (97140)
Over Active: Trigger Point Release, Myofascial Release,
Thieles Massage, Visceral Fascial Manipulation, Connective
Tissue Mobilization, desensitization techniques, Soft Tissue
Mobilization
Under Active: Quick stretching for improved PFM fiber
recruitment
Neuromuscular Re-Education (97112)
Over Active: Contract Relax, Strain-Counterstrain,
diaphragmatic breathing, relaxation techniques, pelvic floor
muscle downtraining with biofeedback, MET
Underactive: Biofeedback or tactile cuing for improved
PFM awareness and isolation, as well as transverse abdominus
co-contraction
Treatments
Therapeutic Exercise (97110)
Over Active: Pelvic floor muscle repeated contractions,
endurance and quick contractions, can be biofeedback
assissted/guided
Under Active: Initiate with accessory muscle activation
Transverse abdominus co-contraction
Kegels
“Pelvic Brace” or the “Knack”
Initiate in gravity-eliminated or gravity-assisted position
Biofeedback
Treatments
Electrical Stimulation
(97014, 97032)
Behavioral Retraining
Bladder diary
FES
Scheduled voiding
TENS
Bladder retraining
Modalities (97010,
97035)
Cold, Heat, Ultrasound
Home Treatments
Vaginal Dilators
Therawand
Urge suppression
Relaxation
Patient Education!
Body Positioning with Toileting
http://squattypotty.com/
Interested in learning more?
APTA SOWH courses
Shadowing
Online Courses and
Continuing Education
Herman and Wallace Pelvic
Rehabilitation Institute
National/International
Organizations
Contact Information
Carin Cappadocia
[email protected]
Albany Medical Center
Outpatient Physical Therapy
618 Central Ave.
Albany, NY 12206
(518)262-9700
References
Baker J, Costa D, Guarino JM, Nygaard I. Comparison of mindfulness based stress reduction versis yoga on urinary
urge incontinence: a randomized pilot study with 6 month and 1 year follow-up visits. Female Pelvic Med
Reconstructr Surg. 2014;20(3):141-6.
Basson R, Berman J, burnett A, et al. Report of the international consensus development conference on female
sexual dysfunction: definitions and classifications. J urol 163: 888-893. 2000.
Bendana EE, Belarmino JM, Dinh JH, Cook CL, Murray BP, Feustel PJ, De EL. Efficacy of transvaginal biofeedback
and electrical stimulation in women with urinary urgency and frequency and associated pelvic floor muscle slasm.
Urol Nurs. 2009;29(3):171-6.
Braekken IH, Majida M, Engh ME, Bo K. Can pelvic floor muscle training reverse pelvic organ prolapse and reduce
prolapse symptoms? An assessor-blinded, randomized control trial. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2010;203(2):170
Dannecker C, Wolf V, Raab R, Hepp H, Anthuber C. EMG biofeedback assisted pelvic floor muscle training is an
effective therapy of stress urinary incontinence or mixed incontinence; a 7-year experience with 390 patients. Arch
Gynecol Obstet. 2005;273(2):93-7.
Drake RL, Vogl W, Mitchell AWM. Gray’s Anatomy for Students. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Elsevier Inc;2005.
Edwards L. Vulvodynia. Clin Obstet Gynecol. 2015 Mar;58(1):143-52
Goldfinger C, Pukall CF Gentilecore-Saulnier E, McLean L, Chamberlain S. A prospective study of pelvic floor
physical therapy: pain and psychosexual outcomes in provoked vestibulodynia. J Sex Med. 2009;6(7):1955-68.
Haefner HK. Report of the international society for the study of vulvovcaginal disease classification of vulvodynia. J
Low Gen Tract Dis. 2007; 11: 48-49.
References
Hanno PM, Erickson D, Moldwin R, Faraday MM. Diagnosis and treatment of interstitual cystitis/bladder pain
syndromeL AUA guidline amendment. J Urol. 2015. doi: 10.1016/j.juro.2015.01.086. [Epub ahead of print]
Hartmann D. Chronic vulvar pain from a physical therapy prespective. Dermatol Ther. 2010; 23: 505-513.
Hibner, M, Castellanos, M, et al, Glob. libr. women's med.,
(ISSN: 1756-2228) 2011; DOI 10.3843/GLOWM.10468
Hibner M, Desai N, Robertson LJ, Nour M. Pudendal Neuralgia. J Minim Invasive Gynecol. 2010;17(2):148-53.
McKay E, Kaufman RH, Doctor U, Berkova Z, Glazer H, Redko V. Treating vulvar vestibulitis with electromyographic
biofeedback of pelvic floor musculature. J Reprod Med. 2001;46(4):337-342.
Messelink EJ. The overactive bladder and the role of pelvic floor muscles. BJU Int. 1999;83(2): 31-5.
Minardi D, d’Anzeo G, Parri G, et al. The role of uroflowmetry biofeedback and biofeedback training of pelvic floor
muscles in the treatment of recurrent urinary tract infections in women with dysfunctional voiding; a randomized
controlled prspective study. Urology. 2010;65(6):1299-304.
Reissing ED, Armstrong HL, Allen C. Pelvic floor physical therapy for lifelong vaginismus; a retrospective chart
review and interview study. J Sex Marital Ther. 2013;39(4):306-20.
Riley MA, Organist L. Streamlining biofeedback for urge incontinence, Urol Nurse. 2014;34(1):19-26.
Seo JT, Choe JH, Lee WS, Kim Kh. Efficacy of functional electrical stimulation-biofeedback with sexual cognitivebehavioral therapy as a treatment of vaginismus. Urology. 2005;66(1):77-81.
Shafik A, El Sabai O. Study of the pelvic floor muscles in vaginismus: a concept of pathogenesis. Eur J Obstet
Gynecol Reprod Biol. 2002;105(1):67-70.
Shafik A, Shafik IA. Overactive bladder inhibition in response to pelvic floor muscle exercises. World J Urol.
2003;20(6):374-7.
Stupp L, Resende AP, Oliveira E, Castro RA, Girao MJ, Satori MG. Pelvic floor muscle training for treatment of pelvic
organ prolapse: an assessor-blinded randomized control trial. Int Urogynecol J. 2011;22(10):1233-9.
Questions?