PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Dance and virtual reality: A promising treatment for urinary incontinence in elderly women

2014-01-14
(Press-News.org) Contact information: William Raillant-Clark
w.raillant-clark@umontreal.ca
514-343-7593
University of Montreal
Dance and virtual reality: A promising treatment for urinary incontinence in elderly women This news release is available in French.

Virtual reality, dance and fun are not the first things that come to mind when we think of treating urinary incontinence in senior women. However, these concepts were the foundations of a promising study by Dr. Chantal Dumoulin, PhD, Canada Research Chair in Urogynaecological Health and Aging, a researcher at the Institut universitaire de gériatrie de Montréal, and an associate professor in the Physiotherapy Program of the Rehabilitation School at Université de Montréal, and her master's student, Miss Valérie Elliott. Dr Eling D. de Bruin, Ph.D., researcher at the department of Health Sciences and Technology, Swiss federal Institute of Technology, Zurich, Switzerland collaborated in this study for his expertise in the use of exergame in geriatric rehabilitation. The results of their feasibility study were published in Neurourology and Urodynamics.

For the study, the researchers added a series of dance exercises via a video game console to a physiotherapy program for pelvic floor muscles. What were the results for the 24 participants? A greater decrease in daily urine leakage than for the usual program (improvement in effectiveness) as well as no dropouts from the program and a higher weekly participation rate (increase in compliance). According to the researchers, fun is a recipe for success. "Compliance with the program is a key success factor: the more you practice, the more you strengthen your pelvic floor muscles. Our challenge was to motivate women to show up each week. We quickly learned that the dance component was the part that the women found most fun and didn't want to miss. The socialization aspect shouldn't be ignored either: they laughed a lot as they danced!" explained a delighted Chantal Dumoulin. The dance period also served as a concrete way for women to apply pelvic floor muscle exercises that are traditionally static. "Dancing gives women confidence, as they have to move their legs quickly to keep up with the choreography in the video game while controlling their urine. They now know they can contract their pelvic floor muscles when they perform any daily activity to prevent urine leakage. These exercises are therefore more functional." Although a lot of research already employs different aspects of virtual reality, this is the first time that it has been used to treat urinary incontinence. This successful feasibility study opens the door to a randomized clinical trial.

### The Incontinence & Aging Laboratory and Dr. Chantal Dumoulin Chantal Dumoulin, PhD, is the director of the Incontinence & Aging Laboratory. She is a researcher at the IUGM Research Centre and an associate professor in the Physiotherapy Program at the School of Rehabilitation at Université de Montréal. She is also the Canada Research Chair in Urogyneacological Health and Aging. She focuses her research on urinary incontinence in older women to better understand, prevent and identify ways of addressing this condition.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Brain structure shows who is most sensitive to pain

2014-01-14
Brain structure shows who is most sensitive to pain WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. – Jan. 14, 2014 – Everybody feels pain differently, and brain structure may hold the clue to these differences. In a study published in the current online issue of the journal ...

Geriatric health professionals experience added burden when caring for own family members

2014-01-14
Geriatric health professionals experience added burden when caring for own family members (Boston) --In what is believed to be the first study of its kind, researchers from Boston Medical Center (BMC) and Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM) ...

Georgia Tech researchers reveal phrases that pay on Kickstarter

2014-01-14
Georgia Tech researchers reveal phrases that pay on Kickstarter New study finds that pitch language plays major role in success of projects on popular crowdfunding site Researchers at Georgia Tech studying the burgeoning phenomenon of crowdfunding have ...

Potential future data storage at domain boundaries

2014-01-14
Potential future data storage at domain boundaries Scientists discover polar domain walls in antiferroelectric materials This news release is available in German. Storing more and more in an ever-smaller space – what sounds impossible is in fact just ...

Research shows early promise of new drug for cancers caused by viruses

2014-01-14
Research shows early promise of new drug for cancers caused by viruses New Orleans, LA – Christopher Parsons, MD, Director of the HIV Malignancies Program at LSU Health Sciences Center New Orleans, is the senior author of a paper that is the ...

Illinois study identifies 3 risk factors most highly correlated with child obesity

2014-01-14
Illinois study identifies 3 risk factors most highly correlated with child obesity URBANA, Ill. – A University of Illinois study has identified the three most significant risk factors for child ...

Scientists show how insulin-producing cells may fail in diabetes, how they might someday be restored

2014-01-14
Scientists show how insulin-producing cells may fail in diabetes, how they might someday be restored These cells may sometimes revert to a non-functional state, but other pancreatic cells may someday step in to replace them Two new studies led ...

NASA sees rainfall from System 94S over Australia's Arnhem region

2014-01-14
NASA sees rainfall from System 94S over Australia's Arnhem region The low pressure area designated as System 94S has been trying to organize off the northern coast of Australia's Northern Territory for a couple of days. NASA's TRMM satellite passed overhead on January ...

High levels of molecular chlorine found in arctic atmosphere

2014-01-14
High levels of molecular chlorine found in arctic atmosphere Scientists studying the atmosphere above Barrow, Alaska, have discovered unprecedented levels of molecular chlorine in the air, a new study reports. Molecular chlorine, from sea salt ...

Embargoed news: Panel at odds over new BP guidelines

2014-01-14
Embargoed news: Panel at odds over new BP guidelines Annals of Internal Medicine Jan. 14, 2014 tip sheet 1. Panel at odds over newly released blood pressure guidelines Panel members explain why they voted against raising systolic blood pressure targets Some ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Prolonged drought linked to instability in key nitrogen-cycling microbes in Connecticut salt marsh

Self-cleaning fuel cells? Researchers reveal steam-powered fix for ‘sulfur poisoning’

Bacteria found in mouth and gut may help protect against severe peanut allergic reactions

Ultra-processed foods in preschool years associated with behavioural difficulties in childhood

A fanged frog long thought to be one species is revealing itself to be several

Weill Cornell Medicine selected for Prostate Cancer Foundation Challenge Award

Largest high-precision 3D facial database built in China, enabling more lifelike digital humans

SwRI upgrades facilities to expand subsurface safety valve testing to new application

Iron deficiency blocks the growth of young pancreatic cells

Selective forest thinning in the eastern Cascades supports both snowpack and wildfire resilience

A sea of light: HETDEX astronomers reveal hidden structures in the young universe

Some young gamers may be at higher risk of mental health problems, but family and school support can help

Reduce rust by dumping your wok twice, and other kitchen tips

High-fat diet accelerates breast cancer tumor growth and invasion

Leveraging AI models, neuroscientists parse canary songs to better understand human speech

Ultraprocessed food consumption and behavioral outcomes in Canadian children

The ISSCR honors Dr. Kyle M. Loh with the 2026 Early Career Impact Award for Transformative Advances in Stem Cell Biology

The ISSCR honors Alexander Meissner with the 2026 ISSCR Momentum Award for exceptional work in developmental and stem cell epigenetics

The ISSCR honors stem cell COREdinates and CorEUstem with the 2026 ISSCR Public Service Award

Minimally invasive procedure effectively treats small kidney cancers

SwRI earns CMMC Level 2 cybersecurity certification

Doctors and nurses believe their own substance use affects patients

Life forms can planet hop on asteroid debris – and survive

Sylvia Hurtado voted AERA President-Elect; key members elected to AERA Council

Mount Sinai and King Saud University Medical City forge a three-year collaboration to advance precision medicine in familial inflammatory bowel disease

AI biases can influence people’s perception of history

Prenatal opioid exposure and well-being through adolescence

Big and small dogs both impact indoor air quality, just differently

Wearing a weighted vest to strengthen bones? Make sure you’re moving

Microbe survives the pressures of impact-induced ejection from Mars

[Press-News.org] Dance and virtual reality: A promising treatment for urinary incontinence in elderly women