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Case Report

Case Report. Katrina Marie D. Soto. General Data. G.S. 63 year old G3P3 (3003) Married Roman Catholic Housewife. Introital mass. Chief Complaint. Past Medical History. No comorbids (hypertension, DM, Asthma, COPD) No previous surgeries No allergies. Personal and Social History.

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Case Report

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  1. Case Report Katrina Marie D. Soto

  2. General Data • G.S. • 63 year old • G3P3 (3003) • Married • Roman Catholic • Housewife

  3. Introital mass Chief Complaint

  4. Past Medical History • No comorbids (hypertension, DM, Asthma, COPD) • No previous surgeries • No allergies

  5. Personal and Social History • Non-smoker • Non-alcoholic beverage drinker

  6. Family History • (+) Bronchial Asthma- maternal side • (-) Hypertension, Diabetes mellitus, asthma

  7. Menstrual History • Menarche: 17 years old • Regular intervals (28-30 days) • Duration: 3 days • 2 pads per day • (+) occassionaldysmenorrhea • Menopause for the past 19 years (1981)

  8. Gynecologic History • Coitarche: 18 years old • Sexual Partners: 2 • Denied sexual activity • (+) occassional vaginal bleeding • No foul smelling vaginal discharge • Denied OCP or IUD use • Pap Smear 2009: normal

  9. OB History • G3P3 (3003) • 1970 –full term- female- ~7lbs- NSD- Isabela hospital- no fetomaternal complications • 1971 –full term- female- ~8lbs- NSD- Isabela hospital- no fetomaternal complications • 1981 –full term- female- ~7lbs- NSD- Isabela hospital- no fetomaternal complications

  10. History of Present Illness

  11. HPI

  12. HPI

  13. Review of Systems • Unremarkeable

  14. Physical Examination • Conscious, coherent, not in cardio-respiratory distress, • BP: 110/70mmHg CR: 68/min, regular RR: 20/min, regular T: 36.8oC Wt 58 kg Ht 168cm BMI 22.7 • Skin: warm with good skin turgor • Head: skull normocephalic, atraumatic • Eyes: pink palpebral conjunctivae, anictericsclerae • Neck: supple neck, with no palpable neck mass, no neck vein engorgement

  15. Physical Examination • Lungs: symmetrical chest expansion, no rib retractions, clear and equal breath sounds • Heart: adynamicprecordium, normal rate, regular rhythm, no murmurs • Abdomen: Symmetrical, flabby , NABS, soft, no direct/indirect tenderness, no masses palpated • Full and equal pulses, no cyanosis • External exam: (+) introital mass, smooth mucosa, no ulcerations or bleeding noted.

  16. Salient Features Subjective Objective • (+) 63 year old G3P3 (3003) • (+) 3 year history of gradually enlarging introital mass • (+) 1 year history of frequency, incontinence, feeling of incomplete voiding, occ vaginal bleeding TVS: normal • No comorbids or previous surgeries • Menopause for 19 years • G3P3 (3003) NSD, 7-8 lb babies • Conscious, coherent not in cardiorespiratory distress • BP: 110/70mmHg CR: 68/min, regular RR: 20/min, regular T: 36.8oC Wt 58 kg Ht 168cm BMI 22.7 • Abdomen: Symmetrical, flabby , NABS, soft, no direct/indirect tenderness, no masses palpated • External exam: (+) introital mass, smooth mucosa, no ulcerations or bleeding noted.

  17. Initial Assessment • 63 year old G3P3 (3003) • Pelvic Organ Prolapse Stage III

  18. Differential Diagnosis • Pedunculatedmyoma • Cervical Polyp • Bartholin’s Duct Cyst • Soft tissue tumors (lipoma, leimyomas, sarcomas)

  19. Pelvic Organ Prolapse

  20. Epidemiology • 3rd most common indication for hysterectomy • estimated lifetime risk of 11% to undergo surgery for prolapse or incontinence (Olsen, 1997) • Prevalence increases with age (Olsen, 1997) • there was a 100-percent increased risk of prolapse for each decade of life (POSST) • physiologic aging, degenerative processes and hypoestrogenism

  21. Risk Factors • Multiparity • Vaginal birth – most frequently cited risk factor (Swift, 2005) risk of POP increased 1.2 times with each vaginal delivery • Menopause (aging, hypoestrogenism) • Chronically increased intra abdominal pressure (COPD, obesity, constipation) • Pelvic floor trauma • Race • Connective Tissue disorders

  22. Definition • Prolapse is the downward displacement of one of the pelvic organs from its normal location that results in vaginal wall protrusion or bulge • cystocele, cystourethrocele, uterine prolapse, rectocele, and enterocele have traditionally been used to describe the protrusion location

  23. POP-Q

  24. POP-Q Staging Stage 0 No prolapse; anterior and posterior points are all -3 and C (cervix) or D (posterior fornix) is between - TVL (total Vaginal length) and - (TVL - 2) cm. Stage I The criteria for stage 0 are not met, and the most distal prolapse is >1 cm above the level of the hymen (< -1 cm). Stage II The most distal prolapse is between 1 cm above and 1 cm below the hymeneal ring (at least one point is - 1, 0, or +1). Stage III The most distal prolapse is between >1 cm below the hymeneal ring, but no further than 2 cm less than TVL. Stage IV Represents complete vault eversion; the most distal prolapse protrudes to at least (TVL - 2 ) cm. International Continence Society Stages of Pelvic Organ Prolapse Determined by Pelvic Organ Prolapse Quantification System Measurements

  25. Baden-Walker Halfway System • Grade 0 Normal position for each respective site • Grade 1 Descent halfway to the hymen • Grade 2 Descent to the hymen • Grade 3 Descent halfway past the hymen • Grade 4 Maximum possible descent for each site

  26. Pathophysiology • Pelvic organ support is maintained by complex interactions between the levatorani muscle, vagina, and pelvic floor connective tissue • the upper vagina lies nearly horizontal in the standing female • upper vagina is compressed against the levator plate during periods of increased intra-abdominal pressure (flap valve effect)

  27. Relevant Anatomy

  28. The axes of pelvic support • Three support axes • Upper vertical axis (cardinal-uterosacral ligament complex) • Horizontal axis leads to lateral and paravaginalsupports two platforms pubocervical fascia and rectovaginalseptum • Lower vertical axis supports the lower third of the vagina, urethra and anal canal

  29. DeLancey’s three levels of vaginal support • Apical suspension • Upper paracolpium suspends apex to pelvic walls and sacrum • Damage results in prolapse of vaginal apex • Midvaginal lateral attachment • Vaginal attachment to arcus tendineus fascia and levator ani muscle fascia • Pubocervical and rectovaginal fasciae support bladder and anterior rectum • Avulsion results in cystocele or rectocele • Distal perineal fusion • Fusion of vagina to perineal membrane, body and levators • Damage results in deficient perineal body or urethrocele

  30. Clinical Evaluation • Bulge Symptoms • Urinary Symptoms - stress urinary incontinence (SUI), urge urinary incontinence, frequency, urgency, urinary retention, recurrent urinary tract infection, or voiding dysfunction • GI symptoms- constipation • Sexual dysfunction • Pelvic and back pain

  31. Physical Examination • full body systems evaluation to identify pathology outside the pelvis • Initial pelvic exam  dorsal lithotomy position • vulva and perineum are examined for signs of vulvar or vaginal atrophy, lesions, or other abnormalities • neurologic examination of sacral reflexes is performed using a cotton swab (bulbocavernosus reflex and anal wink) • Pelvic organ prolapse examination begins by asking a woman to attempt Valsalva maneuver prior to placing a speculum in the vagina  true anatomy

  32. Physical Examination • Speculum exam • (1) Does the protrusion come beyond the hymen?; (2) What is the presenting part of the prolapse (anterior, posterior, or apical)?; (3) Does the genital hiatus significantly widen with increased intra-abdominal pressure? • Pop Q examination • Bimanual examination is performed to identify other pelvic pathology • Assessment of pelvic floor musculature

  33. Anterior compartment defects • Urethral hypermobility • Distal 4 cm of anterior vaginal wall • Cotton swab test • If describes an arc greater than 30 degrees from horizontal with valsalva • Results in genuine stress incontinence • Cystocele

  34. Evaluation of a cystourethrocele

  35. Cystocele • Main support of urethra and bladder is the pubo-vesical-cervical fascia • Essentially a hernia in the anterior vaginal wall due to weakness or defect in this fascia • Symptoms include pelvic pressure and bulge or mass in the vagina • Surgical repair is the treatment of choice

  36. Posterior compartment defects • Rectocele • Perineal deficiency • Bulbocavernous and superficial transverse muscle heads retracted • Perineal descent • Sagging and funneling of the levator ani around the perineum such that anus becomes most dependent • Difficulty with defecation

  37. Rectocele • Chiefly a hernia in the posterior vaginal wall secondary to weakness or defect in the rectovaginal septum • Symptoms include difficulty evacuating stool, a vaginal mass, and fullness sensation • Rectovaginal exam confirms diagnosis

  38. Evaluation of a rectocele

  39. Rectocele • Damage generally due to excessive pushing in childbirth or chronic constipation • Surgical treatment if symptomatic • Posterior Colporrhaphy • Laxatives and stool softeners • Temporary relief

  40. Apical defects • Uterine prolapse • Normal cervix located in upper third of vagina • Degree of prolapse measured by position of cervix at maximum intraabdominal pressure, without traction • Complete uterovaginal prolapse is called procidentia • Vault prolapse • Enterocele

  41. Uterine prolapse • Weakness of endopelvic fascia and detachment of cardinal and uterosacral ligaments • Complains of severe pelvic or abdominal pressure, bulge or mass, and low back pain • Surgical management includes hysterectomy and vaginal cuff or apex suspension • Estrogen replacement important

  42. Enterocele • A true hernia of the rectouterine or cul-de-sac pouch (pouch of Douglas) into the rectovaginal septum • Descent of bowel in a peritoneum-lined sac between posterior vaginal apex and anterior rectum • Can occur anteriorly as well • Symptoms of fullness and vaginal pressure or palpable mass • Bowel peristalsis confirms diagnosis

  43. Enterocele • Commonly found in association with other defects • Surgical approach • Vaginal • Abdominal • Laparoscopic • Ligation of hernia sac and obliteration of the pouch of Douglas

  44. Approach to Treatment • asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic, expectant management is appropriate • for women with significant prolapse or for those with bothersome symptoms, nonsurgical or surgical therapy may be selected.

  45. Conservative treatments • Obstetric care to protect pelvic floor • Decreased pushing times • Avoid forceps, major lacerations • Permit passive descent • General lifestyle changes • Smoking cessation and cough cessation • Routine use of Kegel pelvic floor exercises • Regular physical activity • Proper nutrition • Weight loss • Avoid constipation and repetitive heavy lifting • Hormone replacement therapy

  46. Non Surgical • Pessaries are the standard nonsurgical treatment for POP. • reserved for women either unfit or unwilling to undergo surgery • 2 types • Support • Space filling

  47. Non Surgical • Pelvic floor muscle exercise  limit progression and alleviate prolapse symptoms (Kegel Exercises) • women learn to consciously contract muscles before and during increases in abdominal pressure, which prevents organ descent • regular muscle strength training builds permanent muscle volume and structural support

  48. Principles of reconstructive pelvic surgery • Site-specific repair • Rebuild weakened endopelvic fascia, repair fascial tears, and reattach prolapsed tissues to stronger sites • Goal is a vagina of normal depth, width and axis • Denervation or muscle trauma cannot be corrected surgically

  49. Surgical • Obliterative • Lefortcolpocleisis and complete colpocleisis • removing extensive vaginal epithelium, suturing anterior and posterior vaginal walls together, obliterating the vaginal vault, and effectively closing the vagina. • technically easier, require less operative time, and offer superior success rates (91-100%) • Reconstructive • restore normal pelvic anatomy and are more commonly performed than obliterative procedures for POP.

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