Introduction and hypothesis The objective was to assess safety and clinical outcomes in women operated on using the Uphold™ Lite Vaginal Support System. Methods We carried out a 1-year, multicenter, prospective, single cohort study of 207 women with symptomatic Pelvic Organ Prolapse Quantification (POP-Q) stage ≥2 apical pelvic organ prolapse, with or without concomitant anterior vaginal wall prolapse. Safety data were collected using a standardized questionnaire. Anatomical outcome was assessed by the POP-Q and subjective outcomes by the Pelvic Floor Distress Inventory after 2 months and 1 year using a one-way repeated measures analysis of variance. Pain was evaluated using a visual analog scale. Results The overall rate of serious complications was 4.3 % (9 out of 207 patients), including 3 patients with bladder perforations, 1 with bleeding >1,000 ml, 2 who had undergone reoperations with complete mesh removal because of pain, and 3 surgical interventions during follow-up because of mesh exposure. POP-Q stage ≤1 after 1 year was 94 % and subjective symptom relief was reported by 91 % of patients (p < 0.001). Pain after 2 months and 1 year was 60 % lower compared with the preoperative mean (p < 0.001). Minor complications occurred in 20 women (9.7 %) and were dominated by lower urinary tract dysfunction. No predisposing risk factors for complications were found. Conclusions The Uphold™ Lite procedure in women with apical pelvic organ prolapse provided satisfactory restoration of vaginal topography and symptom relief. However, serious complication rates were largely comparable with those of other transvaginal mesh kits.
These results indicate that repeated vaginal deliveries increase the risk of minor anal and urinary incontinence, which were found to be a common problem in premenopausal women.
Objective
To assess the influence of various risk factors on long term anal incontinence in women with a complete obstetric tear of the anal sphincter.Design
Postal questionnaire.Setting
Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics, Aarhus University Hospital, Denmark.Subjects
152 women with complete obstetric tear of the anal sphincter.Main outcome measures
Occurrence and duration of anal incontinence in relation to any delivery.Results
56 of 121 respondents had experienced a subsequent vaginal delivery; 23 (41%) of these had had transient anorectal incontinence directly after the complete tear and four (7%) had permanent anorectal incontinence. In the 23 women with transient anorectal incontinence directly after the complete tear, 9 (39%; 95% CI 19%‐59%) developed anorectal incontinence after the next delivery, and this was permanent in four (17–4%; 95% CI 2%–33%). In the 29 women without anorectal incontinence after complete tear, two had transient incontinence of flatus but for less than 14 days after the next delivery.Conclusions
Transient anal incontinence after a complete tear is a predictor of anal incontinence after subsequent vaginal delivery. The major long term problem in our study of premenopausal women was incontinence of flatus. This possibility should be discussed with the women when a further pregnancy is planned.
Among 41,200 consecutive deliveries there were 152 cases of complete tear of the anal sphincter (complete tear). In a case-control design, the association between interventions during labor (forceps, vacuum extraction, use of oxytocin and prostaglandins and mediolateral episiotomy) and complete tear, were evaluated by confounder control using multiple logistic regression analysis. Controls chosen were the patients delivering just before and after the index patient with complete tear. Use of Kielland forceps, mediolateral episiotomy, shoulder dystocia and nulliparity were significantly associated with complete tear. Maternal age, presentation in labor, duration of second stage of labor and the indication for instrumental deliveries and episiotomy had no significant association with complete tear.
Objective
To evaluate the influence of mediolateral episiotomy on the perineal state after spontaneous, singleton vaginal deliveries with fetus in the occiput anterior position.
Design
The study was a population based, observational study. Two approaches were used in the analyses. Initially, we considered the parturients as quasi‐randomised to one of three equally sized groups of midwives with different attitudes towards episiotomy. Secondly, we studied the effect of episiotomy on the state of the anal sphincter, controlling for birthweight, parity, and duration of second stage of labour.
Subjects
2188 pregnant women delivering consecutively.
Main outcome measures
Perineal lacerations and tear of the anal sphincter.
Results
Women allocated to the group of midwives with the lowest rate of episiotomy were more likely to have intact perineum after delivery (OR = l.8 (l.4–2.2)), had a slight tendency towards more perineal lacerations (OR = 1.3 (1.0–1.5)), but no increase risk of having tear of the anal sphincter, compared with the women allocated to the two groups of midwives with higher frequencies of episiotomy. The second approach showed that episiotomy was related to an increased risk of tear of the anal sphincter (OR = 2.3 (1.2–4.6)). However, this relation was not found among the group of parturients delivered by the midwives with the lowest rate of episiotomy (22%).
Conclusions
Our results encourage a conservative approach to the use of mediolateral episiotomy, and in the light of previous findings, it seems reasonable to suggest that episiotomy should ideally be used in about one in five spontaneous vaginal deliveries.
Complete obstetric anal sphincter tear increases the long-term risk of fecal incontinence twofold. When present, the severity of the incontinence symptoms is minor and the risk of incontinence for solid stool is not increased in comparison with the general population. Anal sphincter rupture is the only independent risk factor for fecal incontinence. The severity of fecal incontinence had the same impact on quality of life in both groups.
Changes in the use of episiotomy induced by awareness of clinical practice among midwives seem to increase the incidence of parturients with intact perineum without a concomitant rise in tears of the anal sphincter. To avoid the increase of such tears these changes should probably be restricted to midwives with rates of episiotomies above 30%.
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