1. Predictive value of biomechanical mapping for pelvic organ prolapse surgery
- Author
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S. Abbas Shobeiri, Vladimir Egorov, Vincent Lucente, Noune Sarvazyan, Peter Takacs, Heather van Raalte, and Lennox Hoyte
- Subjects
Tactile imaging ,Urology ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Vaginal wall ,Article ,Pelvic Organ Prolapse ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Tissue elasticity ,Medicine ,Humans ,Orthodontics ,Pelvic organ ,030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicine ,Pelvic floor ,business.industry ,Prolapse surgery ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Pelvic Floor ,Predictive value ,Elasticity ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,body regions ,Muscle relaxation ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Elasticity Imaging Techniques ,Surgery ,Female ,business ,Muscle Contraction - Abstract
OBJECTIVE This study examined biomechanical changes in pelvic floor after urogynecological surgery. METHODS This multisite clinical study was designed to explore changes in tissue elasticity, pelvic support, and certain functions (contractive strength, muscle relaxation speed, muscle motility) after pelvic organ prolapse (POP) surgery. A biomechanical mapping of the pelvic floor was performed before and 4 to 6 months after the surgery. The biomechanical data for 52 parameters were acquired by vaginal tactile imaging for manually applied deflection pressures to vaginal walls and pelvic muscle contractions. The two-sample t-test (P < 0.05) was used to test the null hypothesis that presurgery data in group 1 (positive parameter change after surgery) and presurgery data in group 2 (negative parameter change after surgery) belonged to the same distribution. RESULTS A total of 78 subjects with 255 surgical procedures were analyzed across 5 participating clinical sites. All 52 t-tests for group 1 versus group 2 had P value in the range from 4.0 × 10-10 to 4.3 × 10-2 associating all of the 52 parameter changes after surgery with the presurgical conditions. The P value of before and after surgery correlation ranged from 3.7 × 10-18 to 1.6 × 10-2 for 50 of 52 tests, with Pearson correlation coefficient ranging from -0.79 to -0.27. Thus, vaginal tactile imaging parameters strongly correlated weak pelvic floor presurgery with the positive POP surgery outcome of improved biomechanical properties. CONCLUSIONS Pelvic organ prolapse surgery, in general, improves the biomechanical conditions and integrity of the weak pelvic floor. The proposed biomechanical parameters can predict changes resulting from POP surgery.
- Published
- 2021