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RECRUITING
NCT07642180
NA

Combined Effects of Pelvic Floor Retraining and Hypopressive Exercises in Uterine Prolapse Outcomes

Sponsor: Riphah International University

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

One common pelvic floor condition, particularly in postpartum or later life, is uterine prolapse. It is caused by weak pelvic floor muscles and connective tissues and often presents with pain, urinary incontinence, and reduced quality of life. Although pelvic floor muscle training (PFMT) is commonly used, newer methods such as Hypopressive Exercises (HE) and Pelvic Floor Functional Movement Retraining (PFFMR) offer promising approaches. HE focuses on posture and breathing strategies to reduce intra-abdominal pressure, while PFFMR retrains pelvic stability and function through integrated movement patterns. This study aims to evaluate the combined effects of HE and PFFMR on pain, urogynecological symptoms, and quality of life in women with uterine prolapse, compared to single interventions. This randomized clinical trial will include 32 women aged 30-60 years with stage I-II uterine prolapse at Ganga Ram Hospital, Lahore. Participants will undergo an 8-week program with supervised sessions three times per week. Outcomes will be assessed using the Pelvic Floor Bother Questionnaire (PFBQ), Numeric Pain Rating Scale (NPRS), and Prolapse Quality of Life Questionnaire (P-QoL), and analyzed using SPSS version 25.0.

Official title: Combined Effects of Pelvic Floor Functional Movement Retraining and Hypopressive Exercises on Pain, Urogynecological Symptoms, and Quality of Life in Uterine Prolapse

Key Details

Gender

FEMALE

Age Range

30 Years - 60 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

32

Start Date

2025-04-02

Completion Date

2026-08-15

Last Updated

2026-06-11

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

OTHER

Functional Movement Retraining + Hypopressive Exercises

Participants in Group A will receive a combined intervention consisting of pelvic floor functional movement retraining (PF-FMR) and hypopressive exercises (HE). The intervention will be delivered in supervised sessions three times per week for 8 weeks, each lasting 30-45 minutes. The PF-FMR component will include posture correction, diaphragmatic breathing, and integration of pelvic floor muscle contractions into functional movements such as squats, bridges, and walking. These exercises aim to improve voluntary muscle activation, spinal-pelvic alignment, and core stability,(34) and significant improvements in pelvic floor dysfunction with functionally integrated physiotherapy. In addition, hypopressive exercises will be included to reduce intra-abdominal pressure and stimulate involuntary activation of pelvic floor and deep core muscles through apnea-based breathing techniques. Participants will perform HE in various postures (supine, seated, and standing).

OTHER

Pelvic Floor Functional Movement Retraining

Group B will receive pelvic floor functional movement retraining (PF-FMR) alone, following the same frequency and duration as Group A. This group will focus on active pelvic floor muscle training embedded within dynamic postures and everyday functional tasks. Exercises will include bridges, squats, postural corrections, and diaphragmatic breathing combined with pelvic floor contraction to facilitate core-pelvic coordination. The objective is to retrain muscle control, improve pelvic alignment, and enhance pelvic floor endurance and PFMT to be effective in reducing symptoms of pelvic organ prolapse and improving quality of life. Like Group A, participants in Group B will also be instructed to follow a home program of prescribed exercises, with progress tracked through self-maintained adherence logs.

Locations (1)

Ganga Ram Hospital

Lahore, Punjab Province, Pakistan