Parity as a correlate of adult female urinary incontinence prevalence. (33/441)

STUDY OBJECTIVE: The aim was to investigate the possible association between parity, as indicated by the number of childbirths, and prevalence of urinary incontinence in an adult female population sample. DESIGN AND SETTING: A sample of 3114 women aged 30-59 years was selected at random from the population of Aarhus, Denmark, and mailed a self administered questionnaire on urinary incontinence and, among other things, parity. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 2631 questionnaires was returned (85%) with a slight but significant decrease in respondency by age. MAIN RESULTS: The 1987 urinary incontinence period prevalence was 17%. Seventy eight percent were parous, and 24% had had three or more childbirths. In women aged 30-44 years, the prevalence of urinary incontinence was found to be associated with parity and, in women aged 45 years and more, with three or more childbirths. In parous women 30-44 years of age, the prevalence of urinary incontinence increased with age at least childbirth and, in women aged 45 years and over, it increased with increasing parity but decreased with increasing age at first childbirth. In parous women, no association was found with time since last childbirth. Among clinical types of urinary incontinence, stress incontinence consistently showed the strongest associations with indicators of parity. In women aged 30-44 years, nearly two thirds of the 1987 prevalence of stress incontinence could be attributed to parity. CONCLUSIONS: These findings support the hypothesis that pregnancy and childbirth are potent causes of female urinary incontinence, so that they exert considerable impact on the level of population urinary incontinence prevalence. In the individual woman, the effect seems to be cumulative and long lasting but fades with age.  (+info)

The 'iris effect': how two-dimensional and three-dimensional ultrasound can help us understand anti-incontinence procedures. (34/441)

OBJECTIVE: The objective of this prospective, observational study in patients after tension-free vaginal tape (TVT) implantation was to describe the spatial relationship between suburethral sling implants, urethra and bony pelvis with the help of translabial two-dimensional and three-dimensional (3D) ultrasound. METHODS: A total of 141 women were examined by translabial ultrasound, supine and after voiding. The TVT sling is highly echogenic and easily identified posterior to the urethra. Tape location was described in the mid-sagittal plane relative to bladder neck and inferoposterior symphyseal margin, at rest and on Valsalva maneuver. In a subset of 83 women, 3D volume ultrasound was performed. RESULTS: The cranial tape margin was situated on average 9.3 mm above and 16.5 mm posterior to the symphyseal margin (Valsalva: 3.9 mm below and 9.6 mm behind the symphysis); the average tape movement on Valsalva was 16 (range, 2-34.2) mm. The distance between tape and inferoposterior symphyseal margin narrowed highly significantly from 20.4 +/- 4.3 mm at rest to 12.9 +/- 3.9 mm on Valsalva (P < 0.001). When a fitted line plot was placed through tape coordinates on an x-y coordinate system, it became evident that tape movement occurs in an arc around the fulcrum of the posterior symphysis pubis. The result is an increasing reduction in the gap between tape and symphysis pubis (termed the 'iris effect'), implying mechanical compression of the urethra. CONCLUSIONS: The curative effect of the TVT on stress incontinence is likely to be due to mechanical compression of the urethra between implant and symphysis pubis. A large variation in tape location and movement explains its wide margin of clinical safety and efficacy.  (+info)

Introital ultrasound of the lower genital tract before and after colposuspension: a 4-year objective follow-up. (35/441)

OBJECTIVE: To assess the topography of the bladder neck by introital ultrasound before and after open colposuspension. METHODS: Three hundred and ten women with urodynamically proven stress urinary incontinence were included in this long-term study to investigate the position and function of the bladder neck at rest and during straining. Height (H), distance (D), and urethrovesical angle of the bladder neck (beta) were measured by means of preoperative and postoperative introital ultrasound. Women were followed up; 152 of them (49%) completed 48 months of follow-up. RESULTS: At the 6-month follow-up examination, 90.0% of the women were continent (279/310), 3.5% (11/310) showed voiding difficulties, 3.5% (11/310) had urgency, and 1.6% (5/310) had developed de novo urge incontinence. At the 48-month follow-up, 76.8% of the patients were still continent. All postoperative measurements yielded significantly lower values for angle beta at rest and during straining compared with the preoperative results (P < 0.0001). The median linear movement of the bladder neck during straining decreased from 18.0 mm before surgery to 6.4 mm at the 48-month follow-up (P < 0.0001). The median level of ventrocranial elevation of the vesicourethral junction was 14.3 mm immediately after surgery, 9.9 mm after 6 months and 6.6 mm after 48 months. The degree of surgical bladder-neck elevation was associated with postoperative urgency/de novo urge incontinence (P < 0.0001) and voiding difficulty (P < 0.0001). CONCLUSIONS: The colposuspension procedure reduces angle beta at rest and during straining, restricts linear movement with straining, and elevates the bladder neck. Perioperative introital ultrasound improves understanding of this surgical procedure and might help to prevent postoperative complications.  (+info)

Ultrasound diagnosis of intra-urethral tension-free vaginal tape (TVT) position as a cause of postoperative voiding dysfunction and retropubic pain. (36/441)

Intra-urethral Prolene tape erosion is a rare postoperative complication of tension-free vaginal tape (TVT) plasty. In cases reported in the literature, intra-urethral tape positioning has been diagnosed by urethroscopy as late as 3-12 months after the procedure. Introital ultrasound using a vaginal sector scanner allows for the non-invasive assessment of the position of the Prolene tape in relation to the urethra. Postoperative introital ultrasound might shorten the interval between surgery and the time of diagnosis of an intra-urethrally placed tape and thus significantly shorten the duration of symptoms. We present a patient with urethral pain syndrome and dysuria following TVT plasty. In this case, introital ultrasound was not performed until 8 months after surgery, when it demonstrated intra-urethral Prolene tape positioning as the cause of the patient's complaints. All symptoms disappeared after surgical removal of the intra-urethrally placed parts of the tape. The patient is continent, suggesting that the remaining para-urethral portions of the Prolene tape depicted sonographically ensured adequate stabilization of the mid-urethra in this case. The case report emphasizes the role of introital ultrasound in assessing Prolene tape position relative to the urethra on sagittal and transverse angulated views in the postoperative diagnostic evaluation of functional disturbances occurring after TVT plasty.  (+info)

Sonographic findings in a case of voiding dysfunction secondary to the tension-free vaginal tape (TVT) procedure. (37/441)

The tension-free vaginal tape (TVT) procedure was introduced as a minimally invasive surgical technique for treating female stress urinary incontinence. This procedure is supposed to be associated with less postoperative voiding dysfunction because the vaginal tape, theoretically, remains tension-free. Nevertheless, significant voiding dysfunction or complete urinary retention has been reported to complicate 2.8% to 7.6% of TVT procedures. We report a case of voiding dysfunction following a TVT procedure. Two-dimensional sonography revealed the tape situated beneath the mid-urethra. The spatial orientation between the vaginal tape and the urethral structure was clearly demonstrated on three-dimensional scanning. The urethra was indented from the posterior by the vaginal tape, resulting in acute constriction of the hypoechogenic region of the urethra. Urethral dilation was performed using Hegar dilators. Thereafter, the patient's voiding difficulty improved dramatically and the residual urine volume decreased. One week later, repeat sonography showed the hypoechogenic region of the urethra to have a normal configuration with a lesser degree of urethral indentation.  (+info)

Urinary incontinence: sphincter functioning from a urological perspective. (38/441)

Stress urinary incontinence (SUI) is a debilitating disorder caused by malfunctioning of the urethral sphincter. Anatomical and histological properties of the sphincter, its innervation and supporting structures are explained in relation to the closing mechanism of the bladder outlet. Urethral sphincter function is discussed from the passive concept of urethral pressure transmission to the 'hammock theory' and the role of the pubococcygeus muscles. SUI is caused by a combination of intrinsic sphincter deficiency and urethral hypermobility. The difficult interpretation of the parameters in urodynamic investigation to assess intrinsic sphincter deficiency (ISD) and/or urethral hypermobility is discussed. Electromyography (EMG) is valuable in the assessment of the overall urethral sphincter in relation to maneuvers (kinesiological EMG) and at the level of the muscle fiber (needle EMG). The diagnostic potential of circumferential surface EMG in the urethral sphincter is reviewed in relation to the EMG features of ISD.  (+info)

The role of bladder-to-urethral reflexes in urinary continence mechanisms in rats. (39/441)

Urethral closure mechanisms during passive increments in intravesicular pressure (P(ves)) were investigated using microtip transducer catheters in urethane-anesthetized female rats. After a block of reflex bladder contractions by spinal cord transection at T8-T9, abruptly raising P(ves) to 20, 40, or 60 cmH(2)O for 2 min induced a bladder pressure-dependent contractile response in a restricted portion of the middle urethra (12.5-15 mm from the urethral orifice) that was abolished by cutting the pelvic nerves bilaterally. In pelvic nerve-intact rats, the bilateral transection of either the pudendal nerves, the nerves to the iliococcygeous/pubococcygeous muscles, or the hypogastric nerves significantly reduced (49-74%) the urethral reflex response induced by passive P(ves) increases, and combined transection of these three sets of nerves totally abolished the urethra-closing responses. In spinal cord-intact rats, similar urethral contractile responses were elicited during P(ves) elevation (20 or 40 cmH(2)O) and were also eliminated by bilateral pelvic nerve transection. After spinal cord and pelvic nerve transection, leak point pressures, defined as the pressure inducing fluid leakage from the urethral orifice during passive P(ves) elevation by either bladder pressure clamping in 2.5-cmH(2)O steps or direct compression of the bladder, were significantly lowered by 30-35% compared with sham-operated (spinal cord-transected and pelvic nerve-intact) rats. These results indicate that 1) passive elevation of P(ves) can elicit pelvic afferent nerve-mediated contractile reflexes in the restricted portion of the urethra mediated by activation of sympathetic and somatic nerves and 2) bladder-to-urethral reflexes induced by passive P(ves) elevation significantly contribute to the prevention of stress urinary incontinence.  (+info)

The predictive values of various parameters in the diagnosis of stress urinary incontinence. (40/441)

The Maximum Urethral Closure Pressure (MUCP) and Functional Urethral Length (FUL) are significant parameters of the Urethral Pressure Profile (UPP), while the Q-tip angle and Bladder Neck Descent (BND) are the significant parameters of urethral hypermobility. We performed a study to evaluate the effects and predictive values of each of these parameters in the diagnosis of Stress Urinary Incontinence (SUI). A retrospective study was done involving 90 SUI patients and 38 non-SUI patients who underwent urodynamic study, Q-tip test and perineal ultrasound at Yonsei Medical Center between January, 1999 and February, 2002. There was no statistical difference between the SUI and non-SUI groups in terms of mean age, delivery history, menopausal age and body mass index. While the FUL and Q-tip angle showed significant differences (33.18 +/- 19.55 vs 33.12 +/- 13.37 mm, p=0.002; 65.94 +/- 21.69 vs 56.45 +/- 26.53 degrees C, p=0.02,respectively) neither the MUCP nor the BND showed any significant difference between the two groups (60.06 +/- 29.92 vs 48.97 +/- 42.95 cmH2O, p > 0.05; 1.09 +/- 0.75 vs 0.85 +/- 0.76 cm, p > 0.05; 0.71 +/- 0.80 vs 0.53 +/- 0.72 cm, p > 0.05). The odds ratios for the FUL and Q-tip angle were 1.038 (1.014, 1.061) and 1.017 (1.001, 1.033), respectively. The FUL and Q-tip angle had cut-off values of 1.36 cm (sensitivity: 68.8%, specificity : 54.1%, PPV : 73.8%, NPV : 48.1%) and 20.47 degrees C (sensitivity : 93.3%, specificity : 18.17%, PPV : 68.2%, NPV : 60%), respectively, in the diagnosis of SUI. The area under the curve (AUC) of the FUL and Q-tip angle were on average 0.625 (p=0.0016) and 0.575 (p=0.0012), respectively. Both the FUL and Q-tip angle showed a significant difference between SUI patients and the normal group. However, their value as a diagnostic tool was trivial, and since their sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value and negative predictive value showed inconsistent results at each cut-off value, it would be difficult to apply them to clinical use. A further study is required to set-up standard diagnostic values of these variables for clinical use.  (+info)