A unified pelvic floor conceptual model for studying morphological changes with prolapse, age, and parity - 04/05/24
, Mariana Masteling, PhD c, Whitney Horner, MD a, James A. Ashton-Miller, PhD c, d, Luyun Chen, PhD aAbstract |
Several 2-dimensional and 3-dimensional measurements have been used to assess changes in pelvic floor structures and shape. These include assessment of urogenital and levator hiatus dimensions, levator injury grade, levator bowl volume, and levator plate shape. We argue that each assessment reflects underlying changes in an individual aspect of the overall changes in muscle and fascial structures. Vaginal delivery, aging, and interindividual variations in anatomy combine to affect pelvic floor structures and their connections in different ways. To date, there is no unifying conceptual model that permits the evaluation of how these many measures relate to one another or that reflects overall pelvic floor structure and function. Therefore, this study aimed to describe a unified pelvic floor conceptual model to better understand how the aforementioned changes to the pelvic floor structures and their biomechanical interactions affect pelvic organ support with vaginal birth, prolapse, and age.
In this model, the pelvic floor is composed of 5 key anatomic structures: the (1) pubovisceral, (2) puborectal, and (3) iliococcygeal muscles with their superficial and inferior fascia; (4) the perineal membrane or body; and (5) the anal sphincter complex. Schematically, these structures are considered to originate from pelvic sidewall structures and meet medially at important connection points that include the anal sphincter complex, perineal body, and anococcygeal raphe. The pubovisceral muscle contributes primarily to urogenital hiatus closure, whereas the puborectal muscle is mainly related to levator hiatus closure, although each muscle contributes to the other. Dorsally and laterally, the iliococcygeal muscle forms a shelflike structure in women with normal support that spans the remaining area between these medial muscles and attachments to the pelvic sidewall. Other features include the levator plate, bowl volume, and anorectal angle. The pelvic floor conceptual model integrates existing observations and points out evident knowledge gaps in how parturition, injury, disease, and aging can contribute to changes associated with pelvic floor function caused by the detachment of one or more important connection points or pubovisceral muscle failure.
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Key words : levator ani avulsion, levator ani muscle, levator bowl volume, levator hiatus, pelvic floor conceptual model, pelvic floor muscle injury, pelvic floor shape, pelvic organ prolapse, urogenital hiatus
Plan
| J.O.D. and S.M. share first authorship. |
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| The authors report no conflict of interest. |
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| J.O.D. and J.A.A.M. receive funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH; grant number: RC2 DK122379 ). L.C. receives funding from the NIH (grant number: R01 HD094954). The NIH played no role in the study design; collection, analysis, and interpretation of data; writing of the report; or decision to submit the article for publication. |
Vol 230 - N° 5
P. 476 - mai 2024 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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