John O L DeLancey, James A Ashton-Miller, Jennifer LaCross, Fernanda Pipitone, Payton Schmidt, Luyun Chen
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
An enlarged urogenital hiatus is as important as apical support or fascial attachment failures in the development of prolapse and is strongly related to operative failure, yet we lack a conceptual model for factors responsible for hiatal failure. For a conceptual model to be valid, it cannot be proven false by empirical observation. We present six clinical observations with which future model development must be consistent. (1) Perineal body damage alone does not explain an enlarged urogenital hiatus. Three women have complete 4th degree lacerations but small hiatuses. (2) Levator damage is not a sole causal factor. One woman has bilateral levator avulsion but a normal hiatus, while another has intact muscles and an enlarged hiatus. (3) Hiatal assessment during straining is incomplete. Two women with similar straining urogenital hiatuses of 6-7 cm have respective 1.5 cm and 7 cm resting hiatuses. (4) Urogenital hiatus measurements during straining are confounded by Valsalva effort strength. Urogenital hiatus size increases by 30%, 51%, and 181% in one woman depending on straining strength. (5) Hiatal closure during pelvic muscle contraction differs widely. One woman can close her hiatus from 3.5 cm to 1.5 cm, while another shows no reduction despite evidence of contraction. (6) Prolapse/hiatus interactions occur with advancing age. One woman experiences progressive hiatal enlargement over 31 years. Our clinical observations reveal the complexity of the multiple factors involved in hiatal failure and support the need for a unified disease model consistent with these factors on which to base future research.
期刊介绍:
The International Urogynecology Journal is the official journal of the International Urogynecological Association (IUGA).The International Urogynecology Journal has evolved in response to a perceived need amongst the clinicians, scientists, and researchers active in the field of urogynecology and pelvic floor disorders. Gynecologists, urologists, physiotherapists, nurses and basic scientists require regular means of communication within this field of pelvic floor dysfunction to express new ideas and research, and to review clinical practice in the diagnosis and treatment of women with disorders of the pelvic floor. This Journal has adopted the peer review process for all original contributions and will maintain high standards with regard to the research published therein. The clinical approach to urogynecology and pelvic floor disorders will be emphasized with each issue containing clinically relevant material that will be immediately applicable for clinical medicine. This publication covers all aspects of the field in an interdisciplinary fashion