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Diazepam Vaginal Suppositories for High Tone Pelvic Floor Dysfunction.

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Female Patients With High Tone Pelvic Floor Dysfunction
Interventions
Drug: Placebo Suppository
Registration Number
NCT01233791
Lead Sponsor
TriHealth Inc.
Brief Summary

The purpose of this study is to determine whether vaginal diazepam suppositories are an effective treatment of high tone pelvic floor dysfunction.

Detailed Description

High tone pelvic floor dysfunction is a common cause of pelvic pain in females. It is thought to be initiated by a sentinel event such as trauma, surgery, or vaginal delivery1. Currently, treatment options include warm baths, stretching, physical therapy with myofascial therapy or biofeedback, or pharmacologic therapy with oral amitriptyline or tiazadine2. Physical therapy can be effective. However, it usually involves frequent visits to a specialized physical therapist to undergo intravaginal treatments consisting of myofascial release, massage, or biofeedback. We would like to find a treatment option for patients that would be effective without the invasive and time consuming nature of physical therapy. It is known that diazepam is a valid treatment option for disorders involving spasticity including spastic cerebral palsy5 and tetanus. A literature search on diazepam and high tone pelvic floor dysfunction revealed one paper. This study has an intrinsic flaw as it is a retrospective chart review, and the results are confounded by concurrent physical therapy. They were, however, able to find that patients treated with diazepam suppositories showed a significant improvement in pelvic floor tone. They also assessed pain and sexual function, but these did not reach statistical significance.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
Female
Target Recruitment
48
Inclusion Criteria
  • candidates from the Division of Urogynecology at Good Samaritan Hospital in Cincinnati, OH
  • aged 18-65
  • high tone pelvic floor dysfunction
Exclusion Criteria
  • allergy to diazepam or any drug in the class of benzodiazepines
  • current pelvic floor physical therapy
  • pelvic surgery within the last 3 months
  • current pregnancy, planning on pregnancy during the study period, or not sure if pregnant
  • regular benzodiazepine, muscle relaxant, or daily alcohol use
  • history of alcohol or drug abuse
  • contraindications to diazepam: hepatic or renal dysfunction, myasthenia gravis, acute narrow angle glaucoma, severe respiratory insufficiency, sleep apnea

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Vaginal Diazepam SuppositoryVaginal Diazepam SuppositoryPatients in this arm will be asked to use one vaginal suppository every night for 28 days
Vaginal Placebo SuppositoryPlacebo SuppositoryPatients will be asked to use one vaginal suppository every night for 28 days
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Surface EMGAfter 28 days of treatment

A baseline sEMG will be compared to sEMG after 28 days of treatment.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Surface EMG Midpoint14 days after treatment

A baseline sEMG will be compared to sEMG after 14 days of treatment.

FSFI28 days

Baseline FSFI scores will be compared to scores after 4 weeks of treatment to asses sexual function

VAS28 days

Visual analog scale for pain will be collected at baseline and compared to VAS after 28 days of treatment

SF-1228 days

baseline SF-12 scores will be compared to SF-12 scores after 28 days of treatment to asses quality of life in the two domains of mental and physical well-being.

PGI-I28 days

Patient Global Impression of Improvement will be asked after 28 days of treatment to determine if the patient felt the treatment was helpful

PGI-S28 days

Patient Global Impression of Severity will be collected and compared to determine how severe teh patient perceived their condition to be before and after treatment

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Good Samaritan Hospital

🇺🇸

Cincinnati, Ohio, United States

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