首页   按字顺浏览 期刊浏览 卷期浏览 ANTERIOR VAGINAL PROLAPSEREVIEW OF ANATOMY AND TECHNIQUES OF SURGICAL REPAIR
ANTERIOR VAGINAL PROLAPSEREVIEW OF ANATOMY AND TECHNIQUES OF SURGICAL REPAIR

 

作者: Anne Weber,   Mark Walters,  

 

期刊: Obstetrics & Gynecology  (OVID Available online 1997)
卷期: Volume 89, issue 2  

页码: 311-318

 

ISSN:0029-7844

 

年代: 1997

 

出版商: OVID

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

ObjectiveTo summarize the literature on anterior vaginal prolapse, focusing on vaginal anatomy, etiologic theories, and comparison of anterior colporrhaphy and paravaginal repair.Data SourcesWe identified articles related to anterior vaginal prolapse through a MEDLINE search of English language literature published from January 1966 through December 1995 and in bibliographies in gynecologic text-books.Methods of Study SelectionWe reviewed 80 articles published in peer-reviewed journals or textbooks and related to anterior vaginal proplapse. In addition, ten articles on operative procedures for uninary incontinence were studied.Tabulation, Intergration, and ResultsWe abstracted and synthesized information from 31 papers that contained descriptions of and opinions on vaginal anatomy and etiology of vaginal prolapse. The vagina has three layers—mucosa, muscutaris, and adventitia; there is no vaginal “fascia.” Vaginal support is provided by the underlying levator ani muscles and by lateral connective-tissue attachments at the arcus tendineus fasciae pelvis or “white line.” Anterior vaginal prolapse results from direct or indirect damage to the pelvic muscles or connective tissue or both. Forty-nine articles described surgical techniques for the correction of anterior vaginal prolapse, and 24 of them reported postoperative outcomes. Reported failure rates ranged from 0–20% for anterior colporrhaphy and 3–14% for paravaginal repair. No controlled studies compared different procedures performed primarily for correction of anterior vaginal prolapse.ConclusionsDissection during anterior colporrhaphy splits vaginal muscularis, and repair involves plication of the muscularis and adventitia (not vaginal “fascia”) in the midline, which may pull the lateral attachments further from the pelvic sidewall. Paravaginal repair restores the lateral attachments to the pelvic sidewall at the white line. Controlled studies that compare directly these two procedures for anterior vaginal prolapse repair are necessary to determine their relative effectiveness.

 

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