WEB WOC Continence Care Practice Test

Session length

1 / 20

What is the role of biofeedback in fecal incontinence management?

Teaches and reinforces anal sphincter and pelvic floor contractions with feedback to improve control

Biofeedback in fecal incontinence focuses on neuromuscular retraining of the anal sphincter and pelvic floor using real-time feedback from sensors. By showing the patient when a contraction is performed correctly and whether it’s sustained and coordinated, it helps them learn how to recruit the right muscles and control them more effectively. With practice, this improves voluntary squeeze strength and timing, which can reduce leakage and enhance continence during daily activities and defecation. It’s a valuable conservative therapy that often complements pelvic floor exercises and bowel management. However, it isn’t a universal cure and won’t fix incontinence due to irreversible tissue damage or nerve injury, nor does it replace other necessary treatments when indicated.

Cures all forms of fecal incontinence without need for therapy

Replaces surgical intervention entirely

Provides no benefit

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