Children with bladder bowel dysfunction (BBD) fare well with combined pelvic floor interferential (IF) electrical stimulation and muscle exercises, which can lead to a significant decrease in daytime incontinence, urgency, and constipation, as shown in a study.
A total of 34 children with BBD (mean age, 7.4 years; 28 girls) were randomized to undergo pelvic floor muscle (PFM) exercises alone (n=17) or in combination with transcutaneous IF electrical stimulation (n=17) for 10 sessions. The exercises consisted of contraction of the PFM for 10 seconds followed by 30 seconds of relaxation, abdominal straining, and bear-down manoeuvre. On the other hand, electrical stimulation lasted 20 minutes per session.
Evaluations included kidney and bladder ultrasounds, uroflowmetry plus electromyography (EMG), and a complete voiding and bowel habit diary.
At treatment conclusion, constipation improved in significantly more children in the combination group than in the exercise group (82 percent vs 47 percent; p=0.03). Mean defecation frequency per week increased from 2.7 to 5.8 and from 2.7 to 4.5 in the respective groups (p<0.04).
Combination treatment also led to more patients achieving improvements in daytime incontinence (100 percent vs 25 percent; p=0.007) and urinary tract infection (80 percent vs 38.4 percent; p=0.02) compared with exercise alone.
There was no significant difference seen in uroflowmetry measures after the treatment.