1. Tension-free polypropylene mesh for vaginal repair of anterior vaginal wall prolapse.
- Author
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de Tayrac R, Gervaise A, Chauveaud A, and Fernandez H
- Subjects
- Age Distribution, Aged, Cohort Studies, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Incidence, Middle Aged, Patient Satisfaction, Polypropylenes, Retrospective Studies, Risk Assessment, Severity of Illness Index, Tensile Strength, Treatment Outcome, United Arab Emirates epidemiology, Uterine Prolapse epidemiology, Gynecologic Surgical Procedures methods, Surgical Mesh, Uterine Prolapse diagnosis, Uterine Prolapse surgery
- Abstract
Objective: To study the ongoing results of the repair of anterior vaginal wall prolapse reinforced with tension-free polypropylene mesh (GyneMesh, Gynecare, Ethicon, Issy-Les-Moulineaux, France)., Study Design: A case series of 87 consecutive women with anterior vaginal wall prolapse who underwent a transvaginal procedure using polypropylene mesh between October 1999 and August 2002. The mean age (+/-SD) was 62.4+/-13.4 years. Before the operation, patients underwent physical examination staging of the prolapse with the International Pelvic Organ Prolapse staging system. Thirteen women had stage 2 anterior vaginal wall prolapse (14.9%), 59 had stage 3 (67.9%), and 15 had stage 4 (17.3%). The polypropylene mesh was placed from the retropubic space to the inferior part of the bladder in a tension-freefashion. Patients were followed for 9-43 months, with a median follow-up (+/-SD) of 24+/-9.6 months. We defined "cure" as satisfactory (stage 1) or optimal (stage 0) outcome for point Ba in the staging system., Results: Eighty-four patients returned for follow-up (96.6%). At follow-up, 77 women were cured (91.6%), 5 women had asymptomatic stage 2 anterior vaginal wall prolapse, and 2 had a recurrent stage 3 (2.4%). There were no postoperative infections. There were a total of 7 vaginal erosions of the mesh (8.3%); 4 necessitated a second procedure for partial excision of the mesh., Conclusion: Vaginal repair of anterior vaginal wall prolapse reinforced with tension-free polypropylene mesh is effective and relatively safe. Vaginal erosion occurred in 8.3% of the study population but was easily manageable, with no sequelae.
- Published
- 2005