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Supported in part by Arkansas Blue Cross and Blue Shield

Learn about the benefits and efficacy of pelvic floor physical therapy (PFPT) in managing pelvic floor muscle weakness, urinary incontinence, pelvic pain, and other related conditions. This session aims to educate and empower patients for better quality of life and confidence. Supported by healthcare organizations and offering continuing education credits.

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Supported in part by Arkansas Blue Cross and Blue Shield

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  1. Supported in part by Arkansas Blue Cross and Blue Shield and the Office of the Arkansas Drug Director and in partnership with the Arkansas Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP), the Arkansas Medical Society (AMS), the Arkansas State Medical Board (ASMB), the Arkansas Department of Health (ADH) and its Division of Substance Misuse and Injury Prevention (Prescription Drug Monitoring Program—PDMP) Continuing Education Credit: TEXT: 501-406-0076 Event ID: 32358-30782

  2. Faculty Disclosure of Financial Relationships: Leah Tobey, PT, DPT, cert D.N. has no financial relationships to discuss.

  3. How to join our poll questions: • Open a new text • Text “To”: the number 22333 • In the message line, type LEAHTOBEY999 (not case sensitive)

  4. Objectives

  5. Pelvic floor physical therapy (PFPT) Dispelling rumors & creating understanding • What is it? • Why should I know? • Effective & beneficial treatment • Considered conservative management • Patient empowerment • Crucial for patient quality of life & confidence beyond our office doors • Similar to controlling HTN with medication, pelvic floor therapy can better manage a person’s myofascial pain or weakness/UI. • Creating understanding: • Many patients are initially hesitant when this type of therapy is brought up as part of the treatment plan.

  6. Misperceptions • Incontinence is a natural part of aging • Incontinence after childbirth is normal • Nothing can be done to change incontinence • Walking up to urinate every night is normal • It is normal for intercourse to be painful • 2014 Cochrane Review found high quality evidence to support pelvic floor muscle training as the 1st line treatment for stress & mixed UI in women. Credit to Island Optimal Health & Performance PT group

  7. PFPT • Pelvic floor PTs provide evidence-based physical therapy interventions while promoting lifelong musculoskeletal health. • Treatment emphasis is placed on patient education, therapeutic exercise, home exercise and symptom management. Our goal is to restore function and return our patients back to social, home and leisure activities.

  8. Pelvic Floor Functions Pelvic Floor Dysfunction RFs: • Support of organs • Sphincteric *Maintain continence • Sexual • Sump-pump *Helps move Lymphatic & venous fluid

  9. Pelvic Rehab PT Services (PFPT) Common Conditions • Pelvic floor muscle weakness • UI, FI, POP • PPUI: Post-prostatectomy urinary incontinence • Pelvic pain • CPPS: Chronic pelvic pain syndrome • “chronic prostatitis” • IC: Interstitial cystitis/Painful Bladder Syndrome (PBS) • PN: Pudendal Neuralgia • Coccydynia • Dyssynergia • Constipation/IBS-C

  10. Pelvic Floor Muscle Weakness • UI or FI: • Stress • Urge • Mixed • Pelvic organ Prolapse: • Cystocele • Rectocele

  11. PFM Weakness:Subjective reports • “I’ve tried those ‘Kegels’ and they don’t work for me!” • 44 y/o WF s/p bladder sling/ TVT • “My surgeon gave me a handout on these exercises but I don’t know if I’m doing them right.” • 68 y/o AAM s/p prostatectomy

  12. To Kegel or not to Kegel?

  13. Technique is KEY Top 8 exercise mistakes • Using the wrong muscles • Incorrect form *breath holding • No variety • Following the wrong routine • Not measuring progress • Forgetting to relax • Not being consistency • Giving up before seeing results

  14. Pelvic Floor Rehab…what to expect • Services for men and women • Evaluation and internal/external Examination • Orthopedic evaluation • Bowel and bladder evaluation & retraining • Dietary & food considerations (related to constipation, IE)

  15. The Journal of Sexual Medicine *Currently there is no standardized method of grading PFM tone but this guide is the most commonly used. There is however, reported high reliability and diagnostic agreement among PTs in diagnosing pelvic floor pathology. Reissing ED, et al. Vaginal spasm, pain, and behavior: An empirical investigation of the diagnosis of vaginismus.

  16. PFPT for pain Pelvic Pain • Sometimes this pain is mistaken for other conditions or missed entirely. • Important to diagnose the initial cause of the pain • Secondary problems as well, to get the best results. • “Myofascial pelvic pain in women may be the underlying cause of chronic pelvic pain in 14% to 23% of cases and up to 78% of cases of interstitial cystitis, which is a type of otherwise unexplained bladder pain.” 2012 article in the Journal of Obstetric, Gynecologic & Neonatal Nursing June 2019 Vanderbilt University, Women’s Health Department: My Southern Health.

  17. Commonly treated pain diagnoses • IC/PBS: Interstitial cystitis/Painful bladder syndrome • CPP: Chronic pelvic pain • Constipation • PN: Pudendal neuralgia • EDS: Ehler’sDanlos Syndrome • Important for pelvic floor therapist to teach patient how to relax his/her pelvic floor. • Down-training • Imagery • Reduce stress • Diaphragmatic breathing

  18. Pelvic floor anatomy review • Urogenital triangle: Layer 1 & 2 • Colorectal triangle: Layer 3

  19. The pelvis is a complicated place

  20. Neuromodulation for Pelvic Pain

  21. Neuromodulation for Pelvic Pain • Recent advancements in neuromodulation have lead to the use of spinal cord stimulation for the treatment of severe pelvic pain. • Multiple Case Reports/Case Series have demonstrated benefit with the use of Dorsal Root Ganglion Stimulation for Pelvic Pain • Two randomized, multicenter studies are currently on-going to examine efficacy of this treatment

  22. Dorsal Root Ganglion Stimulation for Pelvic Pain Treatment. • Current Described Technique: Placement on Bilateral L1 and S2 nerve roots. • Treats neuropathic or post surgical pain from Ilioinguinal, Iliohypogastric, Genitofemoral, and Pudendal Nerve distributions.

  23. Barriers? • Compliancy • Study about compliancy of pts in treatment for CPP • Frustrating • Similar to OUD, SUD/Addiction • PFPT Provider availability • List of statewide providers can be available to you on our website. • Most all patients need 2-3 PT sessions • 8-12 sessions are suggested for optimal outcomes

  24. PFPT • What does all this mean? • PTs routinely use education, manual therapy, and exercise to manage pelvic pain conditions (Alappattu, M. Journal of Women’s Health PT: April/June 2019-Volune 43-Issue 2 p 82-88). • Physio/PT, similar to CBT therapist can be a helpful team-member to include in complicated patient cases.

  25. PFPT Study • 17 countries with just <1K PT responses. >80% PTs used Education, Exercise, Manual therapy for patient with PP • Differences/Challenges/Future research: • Geographical differences in patterns of use-specific manual therapy and exercise interventions. • Differences were also noted on the basis of the levels of advanced post professional training • Most common interventions considered effective *but not used frequently were: • CBT • Dry needling • Acupuncture • Topical medications • Internal pelvic manual therapy techniques

  26. Special thanks to: Dr. Lori Mize, board-certified WH specialist & instructor at UCA. Dr. Goree

  27. Discussion Continuing Education Credit: TEXT: 501-406-0076 Event ID: 32358-30782

  28. Questions about the Topic Continuing Education Credit: TEXT: 501-406-0076 Event ID: 32358-30782

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