Effects of External Electric Stimulating in Individuals With Urinary Incontinence After Prostatectomy
Urinary Incontinence
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Urinary Incontinence
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Being a male individual with stress or stress-dominant mixed UI symptoms after undergoing prostatectomy surgery for prostate cancer in the urology clinic
- Being over 40 years old
- Being 24 and over with Mini Mental Test results in individuals over 65 years of age.
- Not having residual cancerous tissue
- Volunteering to participate in the study
Exclusion Criteria:
- Having serious cardiovascular disease (unstable angina and arrhythmia patients, heart failure patients, etc.)
- Having sensory loss
- Having an ongoing urinary infection
- Having only urgency urinary incontinence
- Using a pacemaker
- Receiving active cancer treatment (radiotherapy, chemotherapy)
- Lack of evaluation parameters
- Not continuing the treatment regularly
Sites / Locations
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Sham Comparator
ES group
Sham group
External neuromuscular electrical stimulation was applied to the patients in supine position. It was applied for 30 minutes 3 days a week for 8 weeks. This stimulation consists of a total of eight external electrodes, including 2 sheaths wrapped around the thigh area and 4 electrodes for each leg. Electrodes were placed on the anterior and posterior proximal thighs, buttocks, and outside of the hips. The treatment protocol was applied with symmetrical biphasic current at a frequency of 50 Hertz (Hz), with stimulation and rest periods of 5 seconds of contraction and 5 seconds of rest.
In the Sham group, for 45 minutes, 2 days a week, a vacuum electrode was connected from combined vacuum electrotherapy device over the pelvis and thigh, and only vacuum was applied while the patient was in the supine position, and no current was given from the applied device.