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Query: UMLS:C0033377 (prolapse)
11,717 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

During 1985 to 1989, 177 vaginal hysterectomies were performed in the Department of Gynecology, Kaplan Hospital, Rehovot, Israel, using the Porges technique with some modifications. Ninety patients had some degree of loss of the pelvic support--anterior or posterior wall relaxation, enterocele or uterine prolapse in various degrees. The patients were allocated to two groups, in which two different techniques were compared: group 1, with repair of the pubocervical and pararectal fascia and group 2 without the repair. The repair of the pubocervical and pararectal fascia after vaginal hysterectomy prevented vaginal vault prolapse (zero versus 15 percent, p < 0.01) and reduced the incidence of recurrent rectocele (23 versus 55 percent, p < 0.05) and recurrent cystocele (14 versus 45 percent, p < 0.005). Recurrent genuine stress incontinence was found in 9 percent of patients in group 1 and 18 percent of patients in group 2 (not statistically significant; p = 0.163). Optimal management of relaxation of the vaginal wall during vaginal hysterectomy requires clinical suspicion and precise preoperative diagnosis and therapeutic plan. In the present study, the need for careful repair of the pubocervical and pararectal fascia during vaginal hysterectomy to prevent vaginal vault prolapse is emphasized. This procedure does not prolong the operation significantly (92 +/- 15 versus 84 +/- 17 minutes) and has no deleterious postoperative complications.
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PMID:The importance of the endopelvic fascia repair during vaginal hysterectomy. 144 37

The contribution of evacuation proctography (EP) to the evaluation of pelvic prolapse was assessed in 74 consecutive patients. A rectocele was demonstrated in 73 patients (99%); large rectoceles frequently showed barium trapping, but there was no correlation between these findings and rectal symptoms. An enterocele was detected at evacuation proctography in 13 patients (18%) (including two enteroceles seen only retrospectively), and a sigmoidocele was shown in four patients (5%). Physical examination resulted in detection of only seven enteroceles and of none of the sigmoidoceles. In 48 patients (65%), additional findings were evident at EP, including excessive pelvic floor descent, anal incontinence, rectal intussusception, and spastic pelvic floor. These data suggest that EP is particularly useful in the preoperative evaluation of pelvic prolapse if the patient has anorectal symptoms or is at risk for an enterocele. EP contributes to surgical planning by enabling identification of clinically unsuspected enteroceles and sigmoidoceles and coexistent disorders of rectal evacuation.
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PMID:Pelvic prolapse: assessment with evacuation proctography (defecography) 843 Feb 10

This report describes a spontaneous vaginal vault prolapse in association with massive evisceration following sacrospinous vaginal vault fixation. Careful attention to surgical technique is critical to the success of the operation. In particular, good apposition of the vaginal vault to the sacrospinous ligament and adequate repair of an enterocele should avoid this complication.
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PMID:Massive evisceration: a complication following sacrospinous vaginal vault fixation. 187 Aug 24

By careful observation of the physical findings in the patient complaining of one of the disorders of genital prolapse, it should be possible to discern the origin of the symptoms and therefore to devise an appropriate treatment that would remedy by reconstruction all of the signs of anatomic weakness. The goals of reconstructive surgery are three: to relieve the symptoms, to restore the anatomy to normal, and to restore the function to normal. When any element of weakness in the pelvic floor is found to be sufficient to produce symptoms that warrant repair, it is the responsibility of the surgeon to identify all the sites of weakness, so that all may be repaired at the same time, sparing the patient the expense, pain, and inconvenience of future readmission for further surgery. These weaknesses all relate to deficiencies of the six major organ systems that are involved in the support of the female pelvis, which may be damaged singly or in any combination. There are various types of cystocele, each of which must be carefully excised if an appropriate surgical treatment is to be given. This may involve correction of cystocele, enterocele, rectocele, prolapse of the uterus, and posthysterectomy prolapse of the vaginal vault. With enterocele, it is possible to correlate the four common types of enterocele with their location, which in turn correlates directly with their treatment. The prevention of complications is emphasized along with the treatment of certain mechanical complications easily recognized at the time of surgery.
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PMID:Surgery for pelvic floor disorders. 192 55

The authors present a new method for assessing pelvic prolapse with dynamic fast magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. Twenty-six women with signs and symptoms suggesting pelvic prolapse and 16 control subjects were studied with a series of fast (6-12-second) MR images. Sagittal and coronal images were obtained with graded increase in voluntary pelvic strain, allowing for dynamic display and quantification of the pelvic prolapse process. The distance from the pubococcygeal line was used as an internal reference for measurement of descent in the maximal strain position. With use of control results for normal limit values, prolapse involving the anterior pelvic compartment (cystocele), the middle compartment (vaginal prolapse, uterine prolapse, and enterocele), and the posterior compartment (rectocele) was easily demonstrated. Significant differences between control subjects and patients with prolapse were seen at maximal strain but not in the relaxed state. Quantification of the pelvic descent process with use of fast MR imaging may be of value in surgical planning and postsurgical follow-up.
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PMID:Pelvic floor descent in women: dynamic evaluation with fast MR imaging and cinematic display. 200 86

In patients with congenital absence of the vagina, a neovagina may be created by either operative or nonoperative techniques. A 25-year-old patient with a neovagina created by self-dilatation developed complete prolapse of the neovagina with an enterocele. A transabdominal sacral colpopexy successfully suspended the vaginal vault and allowed the patient to resume sexual function.
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PMID:Prolapse of a neovagina created by self-dilatation. 221 52

For prophylaxis of enterocele and of prolapse of the vagina following hysterectomy, the vaginal stump is fixed in at-risk patients to the sacro-uterine ligaments (known as McCall's suture) or to the sacro-spinal ligament (Amreich-Richter method). We report on the indications and results obtained in 101 sacro-spinal fixations and 211 McCall sutures in vaginal hysterectomy and 118 McCall sutures in abdominal hysterectomy. From 1975 to 1981 sacro-spinal fixation was only occasionally employed in prophylaxis of enterocele. After introduction of the McCall suture in 1982, the use of this method has been steadily increasing and has largely replaced sacrospinal fixation for prophylactic purposes. Nevertheless we are still using this often in cases of total prolapse, since in that situation, the fixation of the vaginal stump to the sacrouterine ligaments (in most cases weakly developed) is insufficient and does not offer enough support. Of a total of 350 McCall sutures performed to date, postrenal anuria occurred twice after kinking of the ureters, a typical complication that requires removal of the McCall suture. In a total of 174 sacro-spinal fixations of the vaginal stump for prophylactic or therapeutic indications, pronounced intraoperative haemorrhage took place in about 5% of the cases, whereas in one case, there was an abscess formation due to an infected haematoma. Technical details on both methods and on avoiding complications are discussed.
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PMID:[Prevention of vaginal prolapse in hysterectomy by suspension of the vaginal stump]. 228 18

One hundred forty-nine consecutive patients who had surgery from May 1890 through December 1986 were evaluated to assess the functional and anatomic results of the paravaginal defect repair for stress urinary incontinence. All patients had their preoperative assessment, operative procedure, and postoperative follow-up managed by the authors. Twelve percent of the patients had one or more previous surgical procedures for urinary incontinence. Sixteen percent of the patients had the preoperative diagnosis of urinary incontinence with mixed components of true stress incontinence and detrusor instability. Postoperatively, 6% of all patients developed evidence of cuff prolapse; 5% had an enterocele. In none of those patients did the defect prolapse to the hymen. Five percent of the patients had postoperative evidence of a persistent cystocele, all of which were smaller than they had been preoperatively. An assessment of the anatomic results of the repair demonstrates that meticulous attention must be paid to the proper repair of the paravesical defect, to support of the vaginal cuff, and to management of the cul-de-sac of Douglas to minimize postoperative anatomic defects. Ninety-seven percent of patients had excellent functional results with no postoperative complaints of stress urinary incontinence.
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PMID:A six-year experience with paravaginal defect repair for stress urinary incontinence. 266 May 70

A new procedure was developed for the management of uterine prolapse in young women. Transvaginal sacrospinous uterine fixation was employed successfully in five patients. The advantages of the procedure are that it avoids surgical trauma to the cervix, can be accomplished entirely vaginally, maintains the normal vaginal axis and obliterates the space for potential enterocele.
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PMID:Surgical management of uterine prolapse in young women. 266 12

A woman experienced a small-bowel herniation through a rupture in the vaginal fascia at the apex of a well-supported vagina, leaving the small bowel covered only by a transparent mucosal membrane. This condition developed after a vaginal hysterectomy, with prophylactic plication of the uterosacral ligaments to obliterate the cul-de-sac, had been performed for uterine prolapse, which in turn developed subsequent to a high retropubic urethral suspension. This woman was premenopausal and sexually inactive, and had no other risk factors for failure of the vaginal apical scar. At the time of surgical repair, it appeared that the vaginal incision had failed because the apex was placed on tension between the anterior vaginal wall's attachment to the iliopectineal line and the opposing posterior traction of the uterosacral plication on the posterior vagina. This phenomenon seemed to be a consequence of the original alteration of the vaginal axis by the urethral suspension combined with subsequent enterocele prophylaxis.
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PMID:Incisional hernia of the vaginal apex following vaginal hysterectomy in a premenopausal, sexually inactive woman. 270 23


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