General Exercise as Good as Yoga for Female Urinary Incontinence

A study of older women compared pelvic floor yoga to general muscle conditioning and found yoga was only slightly better at relieving bladder issues.

By Elizabeth Fernandez

A group of women practising yoga.

Yoga has been recommended for years to treat or prevent health conditions that are associated with aging, such as urinary incontinence, but there’s been little data to back it up.

Now, a study led by UC San Francisco has found that pelvic floor yoga isn’t superior to a general exercise program at reducing urinary incontinence (UI) in older women. The researchers said that regular muscle stretching and strengthening exercises could improve UI symptoms almost as much as yoga.

The study published Aug. 27 in Annals of Internal Medicine.

“The results suggest that women who pursue specialized training in pelvic yoga for their bladder problems could see similar improvements if they instead dedicated the same amount of time and effort to other, general physical conditioning exercise,” said first author Alison J. Huang, MD, a UCSF professor of Medicine, Epidemiology and Biostatistics, and Urology.

“Some women may still prefer yoga because of its other potential mind-body benefits,” she said. “But because yoga tends to require specialized instruction and props, it may be easier and less expensive to engage in other forms of physical activity or exercise.”

Urinary incontinence is a major issue for many older women

Studies have shown that urinary incontinence – the involuntary leaking of urine – is a common ailment affecting nearly half of midlife and older women. The condition can lead to depression, social isolation and functional decline.

Pelvic yoga, which has become popular among women of all ages, is designed to improve pelvic health problems such as incontinence, pelvic pain or overactive bladder that can worsen due to childbirth, menopause or aging. But there’s been little rigorous research to evaluate its effectiveness, and many clinicians have been skeptical that yoga provides special benefits.

Rather than focusing primarily on treatments that target the bladder or pelvic floor, perhaps we should focus on strategies that improve our overall physical function as we age.”

Alison J. Huang, MD

The LILA study (Lessening Incontinence through Low-Impact Activity) involved 240 women ages 45 to 90 in Northern California who were experiencing urinary incontinence at least daily, were not using other treatments for incontinence, and not already participating in yoga or organized muscle strengthening activities.

They were randomly assigned for three months either to the pelvic yoga program of group classes twice a week and individual practice once a week, or to a physical conditioning program of general muscle stretching and strengthening with an equivalent amount of group classes and individual practice.

The authors found that women in the yoga group reported more than a 60% decrease in the average frequency of incontinence (from 3.6 episodes a day to less than 1.4 episodes). But women in the general conditioning program also reported nearly a 50% improvement in their symptoms.

The authors concluded that both groups experienced a clinically meaningful improvement in their incontinence, and that yoga was not clearly better, although it resulted in modestly greater improvement in some more specialized types of urinary symptoms.

“The results may provide support for a shift in thinking about treatment approaches for incontinence in older adults,” said Huang, who is also director of research in the Division of General Internal Medicine at UCSF Health. “Rather than focusing primarily on treatments that target the bladder or pelvic floor, perhaps we should focus on strategies that improve our overall physical function as we age.”

Authors: The other authors were Margaret Chesney, PhD, Harini Raghunathan, Michael Schembri and Eric Vittinghoff, PhD, of UCSF; Wendy Berry Mendes, PhD, of Yale University; Sarah Pawlowsky, DPT, of San Francisco State University; and Leslee L. Subak, MD, of Stanford University.

Funding: The LILA trial was supported by National Institute of Diabetes Digestive and Kidney Disorders grant R01AG050588 and National Institutes of Health Office of Research on Women’s Health supplemental award R01DK116712-04S1. Huang was additionally supported by National Institute on Aging grant K24AG068601.

Disclosures: Huang has served as a paid technical advisor to the Rand Corporation for research on urinary incontinence unrelated to the study. No other disclosures were reported by the authors.