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Dive into the research topics where Stéphanie Thibault-Gagnon is active.

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Featured researches published by Stéphanie Thibault-Gagnon.


The Journal of Sexual Medicine | 2016

Effectiveness of Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy and Physical Therapy for Provoked Vestibulodynia: A Randomized Pilot Study.

Corrie Goldfinger; Caroline F. Pukall; Stéphanie Thibault-Gagnon; Linda McLean; Susan Chamberlain

INTRODUCTION Non-medical and non-surgical treatments for provoked vestibulodynia target psychological, sexual, and pelvic floor muscle factors that maintain the condition. AIM The goal of the study was to compare the effects of cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) and physical therapy (PT) on pain and psychosexual outcomes in women with provoked vestibulodynia. METHODS In a clinical trial, 20 women with provoked vestibulodynia were randomly assigned to receive CBT or comprehensive PT. Participants were assessed before treatment, after treatment, and at 6-month follow-up by gynecologic examination, structured interviews, and standardized questionnaires measuring pain, psychological, and sexual variables. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Outcome measurements were based on an adaptation of the Initiative on Methods, Measurement, and Pain Assessment in Clinical Trials recommendations. The primary outcome was change in intercourse pain intensity. Secondary outcomes included pain during the cotton swab test, pain with various sexual and non-sexual activities, and sexual functioning and negative pain cognitions. RESULTS The two treatment groups demonstrated significant decreases in vulvar pain during sexual intercourse, with 70% and 80% of participants in the CBT and PT groups demonstrating a moderate clinically important decrease in pain (≥30%) after treatment. Participants in the two groups also had significant improvements in pain during the gynecologic examination, the percentage of painful intercourse attempts, the percentage of activities resulting in pain, and the ability to continue intercourse without stopping because of pain. Psychological outcomes, including pain catastrophizing and perceived control over pain, also showed improvement in the two groups. Significant improvements in sexual functioning were observed only in participants who completed CBT. Few between-group differences were identified other than the PT group showing earlier improvements in some outcomes. Nearly all improvements were maintained at the 6-month follow-up. CONCLUSION The results of the study suggest that CBT and PT can lead to clinically meaningful improvements in pain and areas of psychosexual functioning.


Advances in Psychosomatic Medicine | 2011

Management of Female Sexual Pain Disorders

Stéphanie C. Boyer; Corrie Goldfinger; Stéphanie Thibault-Gagnon; Caroline F. Pukall

Our understanding of the sexual pain disorders vaginismus and dyspareunia has been fundamentally altered over the past two decades due to increased attention and empirically sound research in this domain. This increased knowledge base has included a shift from a dualistic view of the etiology of painful and/or difficult vaginal penetration being due to either psychological or physiological causes, to a multifactorial perspective. The present chapter reviews current classification and prevalence rates, including ongoing definitional debates. Research regarding the etiology, assessment and management of sexual pain disorders is discussed from a biopsychosocial perspective. Cyclical theories of the development and maintenance of sexual pain disorders, which highlight the complex interplay among physiological, psychological and social factors, are described. Medical/surgical treatment options, pelvic floor rehabilitation and psychological approaches are reviewed, as well as future directions in treatment research.


The Journal of Sexual Medicine | 2015

Active and Passive Components of Pelvic Floor Muscle Tone in Women with Provoked Vestibulodynia: A Perspective Based on a Review of the Literature

Stéphanie Thibault-Gagnon; Mélanie Morin

AIM Pelvic floor muscle (PFM) dysfunctions, especially elevated tone or tension, are suggested to play an important role in the pathophysiology of provoked vestibulodynia (PVD). However, the involvement of the PFMs remains misunderstood as the assessment of muscle tone is complex and requires a thorough understanding of muscle physiology in relation to the characteristics and limitations of current PFM assessment tools. The aim of this review was to describe the structures and mechanisms involved in muscle tone in normally innervated muscle, and to discuss and relate these concepts to the PFM findings in women with PVD. METHODS A narrative overview of the literature retrieved from searches of electronic databases and hand searches. RESULTS Muscle tone in a normally innervated muscle comprises both active (contractile) and passive (viscoelastic) components. Current methods for evaluating PFM tone such as digital palpation, ultrasound imaging, pressure perineometry, dynamometry, and electromyography may evaluate different components. Research findings suggestive of PFM hypertonicity in women with PVD include elevated general PFM tone, changes in viscoelastic properties, and at least in some women, abnormal increases in electrogenic activity. CONCLUSION There is a growing body of evidence to support the involvement of PFM hypertonicity in the pathophysiology of PVD. Limitations of the instruments as well as their properties should be considered when evaluating PFM tone in order to obtain better insight into which component of PFM tone is assessed. Future research is required for further investigating the underlying mechanisms of PFM hypertonicity, and studying the specific effects of physiotherapeutic interventions on PFM tone in women with PVD.


Physiotherapy Canada | 2014

Pelvic Floor Ultrasound Imaging: Are Physiotherapists Interchangeable in the Assessment of Levator Hiatal Biometry?

Stéphanie Thibault-Gagnon; Evelyne Gentilcore-Saulnier; Cindy Auchincloss; Linda McLean

PURPOSE To evaluate inter-examiner reliability in the ultrasound (US) assessment of levator hiatal dimensions when different physiotherapists perform independent data acquisition and analysis. METHODS In this cross-sectional observational study, 14 asymptomatic nulliparous women were imaged at rest, during pelvic floor muscle contraction, and during Valsalva manoeuvre by two physiotherapists using three-dimensional (3D) and four-dimensional (4D) transperineal US. Examiners each measured the dimensions of the levator hiatus (area and antero-posterior and transverse diameters) from the US volumes they respectively acquired. Inter-examiner reliability was determined using intra-class correlation coefficients (ICCs), and inter-examiner agreement was determined using Bland-Altman analyses. RESULTS The ICC results demonstrated very good inter-examiner reliability (ICC=0.84-0.98); Bland-Altman results showed high inter-examiner agreement across all measurements. CONCLUSIONS Trained examiners may be considered interchangeable in the US assessment of levator hiatal biometry. Overall, trained physiotherapists using transperineal US imaging to assess levator hiatal biometry can be confident when comparing their own clinical findings to those of their colleagues and to findings published in the literature.


Journal of Electromyography and Kinesiology | 2018

The temporal relationship between activity of the pelvic floor muscles and motion of selected urogenital landmarks in healthy nulliparous women

Stéphanie Thibault-Gagnon; Cindy Auchincloss; Ryan B. Graham; Linda McLean

AIMS The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship between pelvic floor muscle (PFM) electromyographic (EMG) activation and urogenital landmark motion measured using 2D transperineal ultrasound (US) imaging. METHODS Eight healthy, nulliparous women performed maximum voluntary PFM contractions while EMG and transperineal US images were acquired simultaneously. Changes in the levator plate length (LPL), bladder neck (BN) position and urethral position were determined by visual inspection. The relative timing of EMG onset and the onset of landmark motion, and the correlation coefficients between EMG activation and landmark motion were computed. Comparisons between the correlation coefficients and onset latencies of each landmark motion were made using one-way analysis of variance models. RESULTS Despite generally good reliability metrics for the onset of EMG and the onset of landmark motion, the relative timing of EMG onset and the onset of landmark motion demonstrated no systematic patterns of activation onset. That said, the overall motion of the different urogenital landmarks throughout the MVC task was highly correlated with the PFM EMG data; correlation coefficients were generally good (>0.90) and highly significant (p < .001). The correlation between PFM EMG and LPL motion was significantly better than the correlation between PFM EMG and motion of the other landmarks. The relevance of one outlier is discussed. CONCLUSIONS The motion of all urogenital landmarks seen on US imaging is highly correlated with PFM EMG activation during maximum voluntary PFM contractions and may therefore be of value in the context of biofeedback training to infer that PFM activation has occurred. The motion of the BN, however, may require more cautious interpretation than the reduction of LPL. The timing of the onset of urogenital landmark motion on transperineal US imaging does not precede nor follow the timing of PFM activation, while the high variance of relative onset timing makes the onset of landmark motion of questionable value when training or evaluating co-ordination or motor control.


The Journal of Sexual Medicine | 2016

Differences in Pelvic Morphology Between Women With and Without Provoked Vestibulodynia

Linda McLean; Stéphanie Thibault-Gagnon; Kaylee Brooks; Corrie Goldfinger; Caroline F. Pukall; Susan Chamberlain

OBJECTIVE Pelvic morphology has been suggested to reflect increased tone and reduced strength of the pelvic floor muscles (PFMs) in women with provoked vestibulodynia (PVD) compared to healthy controls. We aimed to determine whether there are differences in pelvic morphology in the resting state, on maximum voluntary contraction (MVC), or on maximum effort Valsalva maneuver (MVM) between women with and without PVD. METHODS While imaged using ultrasound, 38 women with PVD and 39 controls relaxed their PFMs, performed 3 MVCs and performed 3 MVMs. Levator plate length (LPL), levator plate angle (LPA), and anorectal angle (ARA) were determined at rest, at MVC and at MVM. The displacement of the bladder neck (BN) on MVC and on MVM was also determined. Two-way ANCOVAs were used to evaluate the main effects of group and task, the interaction between group and task, and the effect of resting morphology on LPL, LPA, and ARA. A 2-way repeated-measures ANOVA was used to determine whether the groups differed in terms of BN displacement during the tasks. RESULTS Women with PVD had smaller LPLs and LPAs than controls across all tasks. The significant group differences in LPL and LPA at MVC and MVM were no longer significant once the resting values were included as covariates in the models. Bladder neck displacement differed between the groups at MVM but not at MVC. CONCLUSION Women with PVD display shorter LPL sand smaller LPAs than controls but their behavior does not differ when MVC and MVMs are performed. Our results do not support the hypothesis that women with PVD demonstrate abnormalities in PFM contractility on MVC or compliance on MVM.


Archive | 2016

Definitions and Basic Etiology of the Overactive Pelvic Floor

Stéphanie Thibault-Gagnon

A plethora of terms can be found in the literature to describe a physical state involving hyperactive and/or hypertonic pelvic floor muscles, which we refer to as the “overactive pelvic floor (OAPF)”. Difficulties with defining OAPF may be attributable to the complex nature of the condition. Individuals with OAPF often present with a mosaic of comorbid conditions involving different body systems, and symptomatic manifestations involving urinary, anorectal and/or sexual dysfunction, genital/pelvic pain, and psychological distress. Although the etiology of OAPF is not fully understood, a number of etiological theories have been proposed and are reviewed in this chapter.


International Urogynecology Journal | 2014

Do women notice the impact of childbirth-related levator trauma on pelvic floor and sexual function? Results of an observational ultrasound study

Stéphanie Thibault-Gagnon; Sara Yusuf; Suzanne Langer; Vivien Wong; Ka Lai Shek; Andrew J. Martin; Hans Peter Dietz


The Journal of Sexual Medicine | 2016

Differences in the Biometry of the Levator Hiatus at Rest, During Contraction, and During Valsalva Maneuver Between Women With and Without Provoked Vestibulodynia Assessed by Transperineal Ultrasound Imaging

Stéphanie Thibault-Gagnon; Linda McLean; Corrie Goldfinger; Caroline F. Pukall; Susan Chamberlain


The Journal of Sexual Medicine | 2018

Relationships Between 3-Dimensional Transperineal Ultrasound Imaging and Digital Intravaginal Palpation Assessments of the Pelvic Floor Muscles in Women With and Without Provoked Vestibulodynia

Stéphanie Thibault-Gagnon; Corrie Goldfinger; Caroline F. Pukall; Susan Chamberlain; Linda McLean

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