|

Physical Therapy for Men's Health
A Physical therapist specializing in Men's Health has had extensive training
in the urologic, reproductive and colorectal systems. A physical therapist can
evaluate the musculoskeletal anatomy of the pelvis and spine to determine the
cause for low back and pelvic pain which plague men in sports especially biking
and running. Some diagnoses treated by physical therapists for men include fecal/urinary
incontinence, "saddle numbness", and rehabilitation following prostatectomy.
Incorporating manual therapy techniques with EMG biofeedback to assess and treat
pelvic floor muscle dysfunction enables the physical therapist to restore normal
function of the muscle.
What
is EMG/Biofeedback?
EMG/Biofeedback is used to create a permanent change in the muscles' ability
to respond to and function in their daily tasks. A patient can see on the computer
screen the muscle activity with video/audio confirmation of a desired response
such as a muscle contraction. Surface electrodes are placed on the pelvic floor
and on the abdominals to assess muscular compensation. This is NOT electrical
stimulation. You will not feel anything but will learn and see with the physical
therapist if your muscles are very weak or in muscle spasm. EMG/Biofeedback
is used to measure muscle activity and record muscle strength progression during
rehabilitation.
What is Incontinence?
Incontinence refers to the involuntary loss of feces or urine against your
will. Along with leakage there may be other symptoms which include:
Urgency: a strong desire to urinate even when the bladder
is not full. This is sometimes followed by pelvic discomfort or pressure.
Frequency: Urinating more that six to eight times a day or
more than once every two hours with normal fluid intake.
Nocturia: awakening from sleep because of the urge to urinate.
This is abnormal if it occurs regularly more than two times per night.
Stress Incontinence refers to sudden involuntary loss of urine when you sneeze,
cough, walk, laugh or exercise. Urge incontinence occurs as soon as you get
the urge to go to the bathroom. The sensation is over-whelming and your bladder
muscle, the detrusor, contracts at the wrong time and you can't control your
urine. Fecal Incontinence includes the involuntary leakage of feces and gas.
Weak pelvic floor muscles can contribute to the body's inability to "tighten
and close" the opening to the rectum. A careful muscle evaluation can identify
the dysfunction and with proper muscle retraining bladder and bowel control
and pelvic floor muscle strength can improve.
What is Saddle numbness?
Saddle numbness can occur from excessive pressure applied to the pudendal
nerve in the pelvis. Sitting for prolonged periods or trauma from forceful pressure
can cause intermittent numbness or pain in the pelvic region. Physical therapy
addresses these symptoms with a thorough evaluation of spinal and pelvic alignment
and flexibility and muscle strength in the low back and pelvis. A combination
of modalities with manual therapy and a home exercise program will promote decreased
symptoms and increased function. Our specialists offer a bike
fitting program which will ensure proper bike seat fit and joint mechanics.
Enlarged Prostate/Prostatectomy Rehabilitation
Men often experience slow urine stream and difficulty initiating urine stream
when diagnosed with an enlarged prostate. If diagnosed with prostate cancer
and surgery is planned, men are going into a surgery with a pelvic floor dysfunction
and are at a higher risk of urinary incontinence and impotence following the
surgery. Physical therapists can assist with a pelvic floor muscle assessment
PRIOR to surgery to prescribe an appropriate pelvic floor strengthening program
for proper voiding mechanics. After surgery when the catheter is removed another
assessment is made with EMG/Biofeedback to combat pelvic floor muscle atrophy
following disuse after the prostatectomy. A detailed protocol and functional
progression of a home program can help prevent urinary incontinence.
|