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Pelvic-Floor Muscle Rehabilitation in Erectile Dysfunction and Premature Ejaculation

Pierre Lavoisier, Pascal Roy, Emmanuelle Dantony, Antoine Watrelot, Jean Ruggeri, Sébastien Dumoulin
DOI: 10.2522/ptj.20130354 Published 1 December 2014
Pierre Lavoisier
P. Lavoisier, PT, MD, Centre d'Etudes des Dysfonctions Sexuelles (CEDS), 153 Rue Pierre Corneille 69003, Lyon, France.
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Pascal Roy
P. Roy, MD, PhD, Hospices Civils de Lyon, Service de Biostatistique; Université Lyon 1, Villeurbanne, France; and CNRS UMR 5558, Laboratoire de Biométrie et Biologie Evolutive, Equipe Bio Statistique Santé, Pierre-Bénite, Lyon, France.
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Emmanuelle Dantony
E. Dantony, MSc, Hospices Civils de Lyon, Service de Biostatistique; Université Lyon 1; and CNRS UMR 5558, Laboratoire de Biométrie et Biologie Evolutive, Equipe Bio Statistique Santé, Pierre-Bénite.
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Antoine Watrelot
A. Watrelot, MD, Centre de Recherche et d'Etudes de la Stérilité (CRES), Lyon, France.
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Jean Ruggeri
J. Ruggeri, MD, Centre d'Etudes des Dysfonctions Sexuelles (CEDS).
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Sébastien Dumoulin
S. Dumoulin, MSc, Centre d'Etudes des Dysfonctions Sexuelles (CEDS).
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Abstract

Background In men, involuntary or voluntary ischiocavernosus muscle contractions after erection lead to intracavernous blood pressures far higher than the systolic pressure, which builds and maintains penile rigidity. Thus, erectile dysfunction may be partly due to ischiocavernosus muscle atrophy and may be treated by rehabilitation interventions.

Objective The purpose of this study was to determine whether pelvic-floor muscle strengthening interventions could be associated with increases in intracavernous pressure that would increase penile rigidity.

Design An observational study was conducted.

Methods One hundred twenty-two men with isolated erectile dysfunction and 108 men with isolated premature ejaculation participated (no neuromuscular diseases or previous perineal rehabilitation). Thirty-minute sessions of voluntary contractions coupled with electrical stimulation were designed to increase ischiocavernosus muscle strength (monitored through intracavernous pressure increase). A linear mixed-effects model per group analyzed separately, then jointly, the maximum change in pressure (ΔP) and the maximum baseline (ie, respectively, the average contraction-generated difference in intracavernous pressure and the intracavernous pressure plateau at full erection, both measured during the highest moving average of the best 2 minutes of each session).

Results Over 20 sessions, the maximum ΔP increased in erectile dysfunction as well as in premature ejaculation (87% and 88%, respectively, in men with positive trends). The maximum baseline also increased (99% and 72%, respectively, in men with positive trends). The joint modeling indicated that the mean expected progressions of the intracavernous pressure after 5 sessions in erectile dysfunction and premature ejaculation were 62.85 and 64.15 cm H2O, respectively.

Limitations Indirect measurements were obtained of intracavernous pressure and ischiocavernosus muscle force.

Conclusions Pelvic-floor muscle rehabilitation was found to be beneficial in erectile dysfunction. However, its effects on symptoms of premature ejaculation, despite intracavernous pressure gains, were much more difficult to assess. The definitive proof of its benefits requires rather difficult-to-design clinical trials.

Footnotes

  • Pr Lavoisier and Pr Roy provided concept/idea/research design. Pr Lavoisier, Pr Roy, Dr Watrelot, and Dr Ruggeri provided writing. Pr Lavoisier, Dr Ruggeri, and Mr Dumoulin provided data collection. Pr Lavoisier, Pr Roy, Mrs Dantony, and Mr Dumoulin provided data analysis. Pr Lavoisier provided project management, participants, and institutional liaisons. Pr Lavoisier and Mr Dumoulin provided facilities/equipment. Dr Ruggeri provided administrative support. Pr Lavoisier, Dr Watrelot, and Dr Ruggeri provided consultation (including review of the manuscript before submission). The authors thank Jean Iwaz (Hospices Civils de Lyon, France) for the thorough editing of the successive versions of the manuscript.

  • Received August 2, 2013.
  • Accepted July 19, 2014.
  • © 2014 American Physical Therapy Association
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Vol 94 Issue 12 Table of Contents
Physical Therapy: 94 (12)

Issue highlights

  • Exercise Therapy for Patients With Patellofemoral Pain
  • Resistive Inspiratory Muscle Training
  • Moderate- Versus High-Intensity Exercise Training in People With Type 2 Diabetes
  • Pelvic-Floor Muscle Rehabilitation
  • Developmental Outcomes and Mastery Motivation in Toddlers
  • Impaired Reactive Stepping in Patients After Stroke
  • Exercise Participation in Australian Women With Breast Cancer
  • Influence of Fear-Avoidance Beliefs on Disability in Subacromial Shoulder Pain
  • Patient Self-Referral for Physical Therapy in the Netherlands
  • Aerobic Training Within Stroke Rehabilitation
  • Spanish Language Training for Doctor of Physical Therapy Students
  • Chronic Stress, Cortisol, and Pain
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Pelvic-Floor Muscle Rehabilitation in Erectile Dysfunction and Premature Ejaculation
Pierre Lavoisier, Pascal Roy, Emmanuelle Dantony, Antoine Watrelot, Jean Ruggeri, Sébastien Dumoulin
Physical Therapy Dec 2014, 94 (12) 1731-1743; DOI: 10.2522/ptj.20130354

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Pelvic-Floor Muscle Rehabilitation in Erectile Dysfunction and Premature Ejaculation
Pierre Lavoisier, Pascal Roy, Emmanuelle Dantony, Antoine Watrelot, Jean Ruggeri, Sébastien Dumoulin
Physical Therapy Dec 2014, 94 (12) 1731-1743; DOI: 10.2522/ptj.20130354
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