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Presentation Date / Time
Submission Status
Withdrawn
Abstract
Abstract Title
Investigation of the Effects of Exercise Intervention on Urinary Incontinence and Inflammatory Response after Robotic Radical Prostatectomy
Presentation Type
Non-Moderated Poster Abstract
Manuscript Type
Clinical Research
Abstract Category *
Oncology: Prostate
Author's Information
Number of Authors (including submitting/presenting author) *
3
No more than 10 authors can be listed (as per the Good Publication Practice (GPP) Guidelines).
Please ensure the authors are listed in the right order.
Country
Taiwan
Co-author 1
Chia Chi Chen tracy226@ms62.hinet.net Taipei City Hospital Ren-Ai Branch Division of Urology, Department of Surgery Taipei City Taiwan *
Co-author 2
Chien-Wei Chen cwchen@mail.ncyu.edu.tw National Chiayi University Department of Physical Education, Health & Recreation Chiayi County Taiwan -
Co-author 3
Yu-Jen Hsueh DAJ53@tpech.gov.tw Taipei City Hospital Ren-Ai Branch Division of Urology, Department of Surgery Taipei City Taiwan -
Co-author 4
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Co-author 5
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Co-author 6
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Co-author 7
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Co-author 8
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Co-author 9
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Co-author 10
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Co-author 11
Co-author 12
Co-author 13
Co-author 14
Co-author 15
Co-author 16
Co-author 17
Co-author 18
Co-author 19
Co-author 20
Abstract Content
Introduction
For prostate cancer patients with well-differentiated tumors and a life expectancy of over 10 years, prostatectomy is the standard treatment. However, surgery may damage pelvic structures, leading to bladder dysfunction and pelvic floor muscle weakness, resulting in postoperative urinary incontinence. This study explores whether postoperative exercise intervention can improve incontinence and reduce inflammation.
Materials and Methods
This quasi-experimental study was conducted at a urology department in a teaching hospital in northern Taiwan, involving 32 prostate cancer patients who underwent Da Vinci prostatectomy. Participants were randomly assigned to a control group (n=10) and two experimental groups (n=11 each). Experimental groups underwent 12 weeks of pelvic floor muscle training (low-intensity) or combined pelvic floor and core muscle training (high-intensity) post-surgery. All three groups received one course of extracorporeal magnetic wave therapy (6 sessions) during outpatient follow-up. One-way ANOVA was used to compare urinary incontinence volume in the 24-hour pad test among groups and assess the improvement effects. Additionally, ELISA was used to measure changes in cortisol, TNF-α, and IL-6 levels in blood.
Results
No significant differences were found in demographic and disease-related characteristics. Analysis of total urinary incontinence showed that the exercise training group had significantly better results than the control group after 12 weeks (p < 0.05), with no significant difference in improvement based on exercise intensity. Blood analysis showed a significant decrease in cortisol levels after exercise, with the low-intensity group showing statistically significant differences compared to both the no-exercise and high-intensity groups. TNF-α levels gradually decreased post-intervention, indicating reduced inflammation and tissue regeneration, with the low-intensity group showing significant differences compared to the other groups. IL-6 levels decreased over time in all groups post-surgery, with the exercise intervention group showing a significantly greater reduction compared to the control group.
Conclusions
In patients who underwent robotic radical prostatectomy, pelvic floor muscle training 12 weeks post-surgery significantly improved urinary incontinence and reduced leakage. Exercise intensity did not significantly affect the improvement. Low-intensity exercise reduced stress hormones, decreased inflammation, promoted tissue repair, and accelerated wound healing, possibly aiding in incontinence recovery.
Keywords
prostate cancer, pelvic floor muscle exercises, urinary incontinence, postoperative inflammation
Figure 1
https://storage.unitedwebnetwork.com/files/1237/9fee038ce4d367e9e25e70a9b90ba849.png
Figure 1 Caption
Research design
Figure 2
https://storage.unitedwebnetwork.com/files/1237/68b71396850db73aaa8a8b2881f164e3.png
Figure 2 Caption
24-hour pad test
Figure 3
https://storage.unitedwebnetwork.com/files/1237/ed7ee4d7a1425f5eab91221beb3d2d75.png
Figure 3 Caption
Changes in the levels of cortisol, TNF-α, and IL-6 in the blood
Figure 4
Figure 4 Caption
Figure 5
Figure 5 Caption
Character Count
2132
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