| Literature DB >> 35064789 |
Bo S Bergström1,2.
Abstract
Whales are mammals that can dive to depths of > 1000 m without the high water pressure pushing open their mouth or anus. The same is true for the female urethra. The meatus externus and internus are seals that cannot be pushed open by high water pressures. Recent evidence suggests that the female meatus internus is pushed open when the bladder pressure exceeds the urethral pressure. For a relaxed detrusor, this opening is not possible for at least three reasons: the law of elastic collision, Pascal's law of hydrostatics and the Hagen-Poiseuille law. The three laws do not support that urethral function failure is the predominant cause of stress urinary incontinence (SUI); however, they do support that urethral support failure is. Influential urogynecologists claim the opposite. TVT surgery, according to the integral theory of SUI (IT), has high failure rates because it does not principally prevent the urethra from hanging on a less mobile bladder neck. In the case of a long urethra, the tape is set too distally, and in hypomobile SUI, the use of a tension-free suburethral tape is unwarranted/ineffective, because the proximal urethra is not elevated above its resting position. A successful operation corrects urethral support failure and not urethral function failure.Entities:
Keywords: Mobility; Pathophysiology; TVT; Urethral funneling; Urethral pressure; Urgency
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35064789 PMCID: PMC8885533 DOI: 10.1007/s00192-021-05024-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Urogynecol J ISSN: 0937-3462 Impact factor: 1.932
Fig. 1Illustration of hypermobile stress urinary incontinence during a Valsalva maneuver. In the illustrated case, the Pabd is just less than the abdominal leak point pressure (aLPP), and thus there is hanging/forced funneling without urine leakage. The maximal urethral pressure during stress (sMUP) resists the distending force (Fd) but the enforced distension of the proximal urethra may provoke urgency and frequency symptoms [4]. (1) Right anterior pubourethral ligament, which attaches to the pubocervical fascia (PCF), (2) right posterior pubourethral ligament which attaches to the PCF, (3) right intermediate pubourethral ligament, which attaches to the PCF (between this ligament and the os pubis, there is only fat and a ramus of vena clitoridis) and (4) PCF. Abbreviations: Fd: outflow distending force, Fs: pulling/ shearing force, v. clitor: ramus of vena clitoridis, v.p.: vaginal point (which corresponds to the attachment point of the posterior pubourethral ligaments (PUL) to the PCF on each side of the urethra), IVP: intravesical pressure, Pabd: intraabdominal pressure, Pdet: detrusor pressure. The illustration can alternatively be interpreted to demonstrate a urethra with minimal mobility (“fixed urethra”), exhibiting hanging/“forced funneling,” even at rest
Fig. 2Demonstration of hanging/forced funneling in hypermobile, hypomobile and “fixed” types of SUI. It also shows the importance of the “therapeutic window” to choose between a tension-free suburethral support and a lifting support. In cases with minimally mobile BN (“fixed” urethra), i.e., exhibiting hanging/funneling even at rest, a suburethral tension-free tape is of marginal, if any, benefit to the woman. In these cases the proximal urethra at the v.p. must be lifted above its resting position. Lifting is also required in the cases with less hypomobile urethra not hanging at rest. This is because the use of tension-free vaginal tape (TVT) or transobturator tape (TOT) is associated with low cure rates as the downward distance for the urethra to reach a hanging position is short, and a high Pabd makes the TVT and TOT sway downward a little owing to their elasticity. A TOT, in particular, sways downward because it is similar to a 5–8-cm-long horizontal hammock that is laterally fixed on soft tissues. This is in contrast to a TVT, which forms a tight vertical loop that is short because it adheres to the lower part of the bony pubic body postoperatively. To create a lift without the risk of obstruction, the “TVT technique” can be employed to insert one tuned tape in the paraurethral tissue on each side of the v.p. or alternatively to elevate the proximal urethra by broadly folding the pubocervical fascia at the v.p. and then supporting the plicated fascia with a tension-free suburethral tape (TVT); the plicated fascia creates a broad cushen between the urethra and the tape that prevents obstruction problems. PUL, right posterior pubo-urethral ligament which attaches to the PCF; blue color, urethra at rest; brown color, urethra during stress; black arrow, therapeutic window (t.w.); Fs, pulling/shearing force; Fd, outflow distending force; aLPP, abdominal leak point pressure. The distance between the v.p. at rest and the v.p. at the abdominal leak point pressure is the “therapeutic window” (t.w.). A TVT located inside the t.w. is curative. The t.w. can be estimated by holding a fingertip a short distance under the v.p. at rest and asking the woman to perform a slow Valsalva maneuver. The maximum “curative” distance is the t.w. In hypermobile, hypomobile and “fixed” types of SUI, the t.w is large, small and nearly zero, respectively