A prospective multi-center cross-sectional study of urethral mobility in normal parous women in China
10.3760/cma.j.cn131148-20201013-00808
- VernacularTitle:中国正常已育女性尿道活动度的前瞻性多中心横断面研究
- Author:
Shuangyu WU
;
Ying CHEN
;
Kun WANG
;
Huihuan ZHU
;
Suzhen RAN
;
Aihua WEI
;
Yingzi XU
;
Xudong WANG
;
Jiawei TIAN
;
Xinling ZHANG
- From:
Chinese Journal of Ultrasonography
2021;30(4):299-305
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Objective:To assess the urethral mobility of normal parous women in China and explore the impacts of related risk factors on it using translabial ultrasound.Methods:Females who met the inclusion criteria in 37 tertiary hospitals from February 2017 to August 2018 were included. All women underwent standardized translabial ultrasound examination and the urethral rotation angle (URA), bladder neck position at maximum Valsalva maneuver (BNP-V) and bladder neck descent (BND) were measured. Questionnaires were used to collect basic information including age, height, weight, body mass index (BMI), past medical history, maternity history, and urinary incontinence related history. Mann-Whitney U test and multiple linear regression analysis were adopted to explore the influences of age, BMI, delivery mode and parity on normal parous women′s urethral mobility. Then, the study subjects were divided into different groups and the corresponding values of URA, BNP-V and BND were compared. Results:Compared with parous women with normal BMI and no history of vaginal delivery, those who were overweight and/or had a history of vaginal delivery were more likely to gain greater URA and BND ( P<0.05). The URA and BND were not significantly different between women with different times of cesarean sections ( P>0.05); while for women with a history of vaginal delivery, these two parameters increased with the increase of the number of transvaginal deliveries ( P<0.05). Conclusions:BMI and vaginal delivery are important risk factors for the urethral mobility of normal parous women. The urethral mobility increases with the increase of BMI and the number of vaginal deliveries.