At a glance
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Physical Therapy Intervention for Puerperal Mastitis in Breastfeeding Women
In Brief
A clinical study evaluating Education, Therapeutic ultrasound, and 3 other interventions for Mastitis. Completed, enrolled 37 participants across 1 site.
Detailed Summary
Puerperal mastitis is one of the most commonly reported problems during breastfeeding. Women frequently report breast pain, tenderness, redness, engorgement, fever, malaise, chills, lethargy, sweating, headache, nipple damage and a hot spot on the affected breast. These highly distressing symptoms may severely impact on a woman's daily activities and quality of life and might lead to the premature cessation of exclusive breastfeeding, which may have significant impact on infant health and survival. The role of physical therapy in reducing pregnancy/postpartum-related disorders including breast problems is gaining momentum and importance in obstetrics. However, to date, only low-level evidence has shown positive effects of breast massage, a physical technique, on pain, milk supply and symptom relief in women with breastfeeding problems. This is encouraging, however further research is needed to explore whether physical therapy is effective to reduce symptoms of puerperal mastitis. The investigators will conduct a prospective, assessor blinded single-center randomized controlled trial to assess the effectiveness of an individualized physical therapy program with therapeutic ultrasound, education and massage for patients with puerperal mastitis, compared to patients receiving usual obstetric care and sham ultrasound treatment.
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
The education session including education about mastitis, feeding techniques, lifestyle changes, thermal/cryo therapy and demonstration of breast self-massage will take approximately 20 minutes.
Participants will be treated with 5 minutes of therapeutic ultrasound (pulsed mode) at a frequency of 1 Mega Hertz, a duty cycle of 20%, a pulse intensity of 1.8 Watt/centimetre squared. The ultrasound probe will be moved at a speed of about 4 centimetre/second. The intensity and duration will be adjusted if the patient complains of discomfort. The ultrasound transducer head will massage over the tender point on the breast.
Participants will receive 5 minutes of 'sham' ultrasound at 0 Watt/centimetre squared intensity from a physical therapist.
Breast massage includes general and focused massage. Participants will lie in supine position. The breast massage will be applied according to the Vodder method to the affected breast.
Usual obstetric care may include verbal advice/printed patient information regarding mastitis and breastfeeding from the medical or nursing staff.