Document detail
ID

doi:10.1007/s00192-024-05797-1...

Author
Takacs, Peter Rátonyi, Dávid Koroknai, Erzsébet Raalte, Heather Lucente, Vincent Egorov, Vladimir Krasznai, Zoard Tibor Kozma, Bence
Langue
en
Editor

Springer

Category

Urology

Year

2024

listing date

5/15/2024

Keywords
stress urinary incontinence tissue elasticity pelvic support pelvic muscle strength muscle mobility biomechanical integrity score stress floor vti incontinence urinary biomechanical pelvic bi-score muscle
Metrics

Abstract

Introduction and hypothesis This study is aimed at developing and validating a new integral parameter, the Biomechanical Integrity score (BI-score) of the female pelvic floor for stress urinary incontinence conditions.

Methods A total of 130 subjects were included in the observational cohort study; 70 subjects had normal pelvic floor conditions, and 60 subjects had stress urinary incontinence (SUI).

A Vaginal Tactile Imager (VTI) was used to acquire and automatically calculate 52 biomechanical parameters for eight VTI test procedures (probe insertion, elevation, rotation, Valsalva maneuver, voluntary muscle contractions in two planes, relaxation, and reflex contraction).

Statistical methods were applied ( t test, correlation) to identify the VTI parameters sensitive to the pelvic SUI conditions.

Results Twenty-seven parameters were identified as statistically sensitive to SUI development.

They were subdivided into five groups to characterize tissue elasticity (group 1), pelvic support (group 2), pelvic muscle contraction (group 3), involuntary muscle relaxation (group 4), and pelvic muscle mobility (group 5).

Every parameter was transformed to its standard deviation units using the dataset for normal pelvic conditions, similar to the T-score for bone density.

Linear combinations with specified weights led to the composition of five component parameters for groups 1–5 and to the BI-score in standard deviation units.

The p value for the BI-score has p  = 4.0 × 10^–28 for SUI versus normal conditions.

Conclusions Quantitative transformations of the pelvic tissues, support structures, and functions under diseased conditions may be studied with the SUI BI-score in future research and clinical applications.

Takacs, Peter,Rátonyi, Dávid,Koroknai, Erzsébet,Raalte, Heather,Lucente, Vincent,Egorov, Vladimir,Krasznai, Zoard Tibor,Kozma, Bence, 2024, Biomechanical Integrity Score of the Female Pelvic Floor for Stress Urinary Incontinence, Springer

Document

Open

Share

Source

Articles recommended by ES/IODE AI

Clinical Relevance of Plaque Distribution for Basilar Artery Stenosis
study endovascular imaging wall basilar complications plaque postoperative artery plaques stenosis