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Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine, Vol 20, Issue 7 739-747, Copyright © 2001 by American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine


JOURNAL ARTICLE

Sonographic evaluation of anatomic results after the pubovaginal sling procedure for stress urinary incontinence

H. C. Kuo
Department of Urology, Buddhist Tzu Chi General Hospital, Hualien, Taiwan, Republic of China.

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the anatomic changes after the pubovaginal sling procedure in women with stress urinary incontinence by transrectal sonography METHODS: This study enrolled 56 women with varying types of stress urinary incontinence who were treated with the pubovaginal sling procedure using self-fashioned polypropylene mesh. The suburethral sling was fixed without tension and was placed at the position between the bladder neck and the proximal urethra. The patients were investigated preoperatively and postoperatively by transrectal sonography of the bladder and urethra. RESULTS: At a median follow-up of 24 months (range, 6-39 months), 48 patients (85.7%) were cured, 6 (10.7%) had improved, and 2 (3.6%) had treatment failures. Transrectal sonography revealed a well-suspended bladder neck and proximal urethra in all patients who were cured. As measured by changes of the axis of the pubovesical ligament, the position of the bladder neck was elevated by a mean of 29.6 +/- 21.5 degrees in the resting condition and 47.4 +/- 27.7 degrees in the straining condition. An incompetent bladder neck and proximal urethra were noted in 8 patients who had stress urinary incontinence after surgery. The incidence of opening of the bladder neck was 84.6% in 13 patients with de novo urgency or urge incontinence, whereas only 2 (4.7%) of 43 patients who did not have postoperative urgency had opening of the neck (P = .000). CONCLUSION: Transrectal sonography provides useful information about anatomic changes after the pubovaginal sling procedure. Bladder neck incompetence after surgery was closely related to postoperative urgency or urge incontinence.





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Copyright © 2001 by the American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine.