2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.purol.2014.05.003
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Kinésithérapie et symptômes du bas appareil urinaire chez des patients atteints de la sclérose en plaques : étude contrôlée randomisée

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Cited by 21 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…The combination of PFMT and NMES offers some advantage in the reduction of PFM tone and symptoms of OAB. Kinesitherapie et symptomes du bas appareil urinaire chez des patients atteints de la sclerose en plaques: etude controlee randomisee (Physiotherapy and neurogenic lower urinary tract dysfunction in multiple sclerosis patients: a randomized controlled trial) 17 ) Gaspard L, Tombal B, Opsomer RJ, Castille Y, Pesch V, Detrembleur C 5/10 Women with MS Pelvic floor muscle training vs. transcutaneous posterior tibial nerve stimulation 9 sessions Pelvic floor muscle training and transcutaneous posterior tibial nerve stimulation improved symptoms related to urgency in the same way in MS patients with mild disability. Randomized trial of percutaneous tibial nerve stimulation versus extended-release tolterodine: results from the overactive bladder innovative therapy trial 18 ) Peters KM, MacDiarmid SA, Wooldridge LS, Leong FC, Shobeiri SA, Rovner ES, Siegel SW, Tate SB, Jarnagin BK, Rosenblatt PL, Feagins BA 5/10 100 adults with urinary frequency Percutaneous tibial nerve stimulation to extended-release tolterodine 12 weeks This multicenter, randomized trial demonstrates that percutaneous tibial nerve stimulation is safe with statistically significant improvements in patient assessment of OAB symptoms, and with objective effectiveness comparable to that of pharmacotherapy.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The combination of PFMT and NMES offers some advantage in the reduction of PFM tone and symptoms of OAB. Kinesitherapie et symptomes du bas appareil urinaire chez des patients atteints de la sclerose en plaques: etude controlee randomisee (Physiotherapy and neurogenic lower urinary tract dysfunction in multiple sclerosis patients: a randomized controlled trial) 17 ) Gaspard L, Tombal B, Opsomer RJ, Castille Y, Pesch V, Detrembleur C 5/10 Women with MS Pelvic floor muscle training vs. transcutaneous posterior tibial nerve stimulation 9 sessions Pelvic floor muscle training and transcutaneous posterior tibial nerve stimulation improved symptoms related to urgency in the same way in MS patients with mild disability. Randomized trial of percutaneous tibial nerve stimulation versus extended-release tolterodine: results from the overactive bladder innovative therapy trial 18 ) Peters KM, MacDiarmid SA, Wooldridge LS, Leong FC, Shobeiri SA, Rovner ES, Siegel SW, Tate SB, Jarnagin BK, Rosenblatt PL, Feagins BA 5/10 100 adults with urinary frequency Percutaneous tibial nerve stimulation to extended-release tolterodine 12 weeks This multicenter, randomized trial demonstrates that percutaneous tibial nerve stimulation is safe with statistically significant improvements in patient assessment of OAB symptoms, and with objective effectiveness comparable to that of pharmacotherapy.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Another study 17 ) compared the efficacy of pelvic floor muscle training vs. transcutaneous PTNS and found no differences between the groups for quality of life or overactive bladder and frequency of urgency episodes (p=0.197, p=0.532 and p=0.788, respectively). In the study by Peters et al 18 ) , a 13-week subjective global response assessment for overall bladder symptoms demonstrated that percutaneous tibial nerve stimulation participants achieved statistically significant improvement in bladder symptoms, with 54.5% of the participants reporting moderately or markedly improved responses from baseline compared to 20.9% of the sham participants (p<0.001).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Gaspard et al. [33] compared the effect of TTNS with pelvic floor muscle exercises including biofeedback in patients with multiple sclerosis. The patients were randomly assigned to TTNS ( n = 15) and pelvic floor muscle exercises ( n = 16).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The severity of urinary incontinence was measured in six studies [17][18][19][20][21][22]. The implementation of PFMT significantly reduced the severity of urinary incontinence symptoms, and the clinical outcomes proved to be even better in cases of supervised training under a physiotherapist.…”
Section: Librarymentioning
confidence: 99%