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Biofeedback for Pelvic Floor Disorders

期刊

CLINICS IN COLON AND RECTAL SURGERY
卷 34, 期 1, 页码 56-61

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THIEME MEDICAL PUBL INC
DOI: 10.1055/s-0040-1714287

关键词

pelvic floor disorders; biofeedback; pelvic floor muscle training; fecal incontinence; pelvic floor dyssynergia; anismus

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Defecatory disorders, including fecal incontinence and functional anorectal pain, greatly impact quality of life and healthcare costs. Treatments for pelvic floor disorders, such as medications, surgery, physical therapy, and biofeedback, aim to enhance muscle strength and coordination. Biofeedback has shown effectiveness in treating chronic constipation, fecal incontinence, and low anterior resection syndrome, with studies suggesting it is superior to pelvic floor muscle training alone.
Defecatory disorders can include structural, neurological, and functional disorders in addition to concomitant symptoms of fecal incontinence, functional anorectal pain, and pelvic floor dyssynergia. These disorders greatly affect quality of life and healthcare costs. Treatment for pelvic floor disorders can include medications, botulinum toxin, surgery, physical therapy, and biofeedback. Pelvic floor muscle training for pelvic floor disorders aims to enhance strength, speed, and/or endurance or coordination of voluntary anal sphincter and pelvic floor muscle contractions. Biofeedback therapy builds on physical therapy by incorporating the use of equipment to record or amplify activities of the body and feed the information back to the patients. Biofeedback has demonstrated efficacy in the treatment of chronic constipation with dyssynergic defecation, fecal incontinence, and low anterior resection syndrome. Evidence for the use of biofeedback in levator ani syndrome is conflicting. In comparing biofeedback to pelvic floor muscle training alone, studies suggest that biofeedback is superior therapy.

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