Tundra Space

Tundra Space

Clinical Research Directory

Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.

3 clinical studies listed.

Filters:

Postpartum Urinary Incontinence

Tundra lists 3 Postpartum Urinary Incontinence clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.

This data is also available as a public JSON API. AI systems and LLMs are encouraged to use it for structured queries.

COMPLETED

NCT07702565

Exercise-Based Sensorimotor Physiotherapy for Postpartum Pelvic Health and Functional Recovery

This study evaluated whether a 12-week exercise-based sensorimotor physiotherapy program could improve pelvic health and functional recovery in postpartum women. Participants were women aged 18-40 years who were between 6 weeks and 6 months after a singleton delivery. They were randomly assigned to either a sensorimotor physiotherapy group or a control group. The physiotherapy group received supervised exercises targeting pelvic floor activation, lumbopelvic motor control, sensory re-education, proprioceptive training, functional stabilization, and biofeedback-assisted training. The control group received standard postpartum education and home advice. The main outcomes were pelvic motor control and perineal sensory function. Other outcomes included pelvic floor muscle strength, urinary symptoms, pelvic distress, core endurance, postural stability, pain intensity, and health-related quality of life. Outcomes were assessed at baseline, week 6, week 12, and week 24. The study aimed to determine whether structured sensorimotor physiotherapy provides greater benefits than standard postpartum advice and whether recovery patterns differ according to vaginal or cesarean delivery.

Gender: FEMALE

Ages: 18 Years - 40 Years

Updated: 2026-07-14

1 state

Postpartum Pelvic Floor Dysfunction
Postpartum Urinary Incontinence
Postpartum Functional Recovery
+2
NOT YET RECRUITING

NCT07314502

Prenatal Exercise Including Perineal Massage and Maternal-Neonatal Outcomes

The study is divided into three phases: Phase 1: Baseline survey to obtain an overall understanding of the current situation of voluntary participation in prenatal perineal massage. Phase 2: Follow-up survey to further assess the current situation of voluntary prenatal exercise and prenatal perineal massage. Phase 3: Implementation of an intervention combining prenatal exercise and perineal massage. The goal of this clinical trial is to learn whether a combined prenatal program of supervised, moderate-intensity exercise plus professionally administered antenatal perineal massage can improve maternal and newborn outcomes and can be safely implemented as part of routine antenatal care in healthy pregnant women receiving care at participating hospitals. The main questions it aims to answer are: 1. Does the combined prenatal program reduce urinary incontinence during pregnancy and after delivery? 2. Does the combined prenatal program reduce depressive symptoms during pregnancy and in the postpartum period? 3. Does the combined prenatal program lower the risk of gestational diabetes mellitus? 4. Does the combined prenatal program reduce neonatal complications, including macrosomia? 5. Do spontaneous, self-initiated prenatal exercise and structured, supervised prenatal exercise differ in their effects on maternal and neonatal outcomes ()? Researchers will compare the combined prenatal program to usual antenatal care to determine whether the intervention improves maternal and neonatal outcomes and is safe, feasible, and acceptable in a real-world clinical setting. Participants will: 1. Be screened and enrolled during pregnancy and complete baseline and follow-up assessments during pregnancy and after delivery. 2. Be randomly assigned to either an intervention group or a usual-care control group. 3. If assigned to the intervention group, attend supervised moderate-intensity exercise sessions three times per week (approximately 60 minutes per session) throughout pregnancy and receive antenatal perineal massage delivered by trained health professionals during late pregnancy. 4. Provide questionnaire-based information and clinical data collected during routine visits and from medical records for outcome evaluation.

Gender: FEMALE

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2026-01-02

Postpartum Urinary Incontinence
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Neonatal Complications
+1
RECRUITING

NCT06812806

Correlation Between the Change in the Antero-posterior Diameter of the Pelvic Side and the Incidence of Post-partum Urinary Incontinence

During pregnancy, the strength of the pelvic floor muscles may decrease, which can lead to musculoskeletal changes that may facilitate the onset of urinary incontinence. The investigators decided to conduct this study firstly to analyze, through simple ultrasound indices, how the contractile capacity of the pelvic floor muscles affects postpartum urinary incontinence; secondly to study the correlation between the use of perineal gymnastics, the incidence of postpartum urinary incontinence, and the strength of floor contraction.

Gender: FEMALE

Ages: 18 Years - 45 Years

Updated: 2025-02-06

1 state

Postpartum Urinary Incontinence