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1.
Front Psychol ; 13: 840931, 2022.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35356354

RESUMEN

Background: Prophylactic Bilateral Salpingo-Oophorectomy (PBSO) reduces the risk of developing ovarian cancer. However, the psychological mechanisms that may affect post-surgery Quality of Life (QoL) among patients who underwent PBSO are still largely unknown. Thus, this study aimed at exploring the direct and indirect associations of satisfaction with medical communication and cancer anxiety on post-surgery QoL among women at high risk of developing ovarian cancer. Method: Fifty-nine women (mean age: 50.64 ± 6.7 years) who underwent PBSO took part in this cross-sectional study, filling out a sociodemographic and clinical questionnaire, a battery of validated psychological measures and an ad hoc developed scale for the assessment of cancer anxiety. We first examined the correlations among all variables of interest, and then tested if cancer anxiety mediated the association between satisfaction with medical communication and post-surgery psychological QoL, controlling both for time from surgery and education. Results: Post-surgery psychological QoL was unrelated from any sociodemographic or clinical variable. Cancer anxiety had a significant direct negative effect on psychological QoL, while satisfaction with medical communication had a significant positive direct effect on it. Finally, cancer anxiety significantly mediated the association between satisfaction with medical communication and post-surgery psychological QoL. Discussion: Results suggest that post-surgery psychological QoL of patients who underwent PBSO may be increased with interventions, delivered in a genetic counselling setting, targeting quality of medical communication and cancer anxiety.

2.
Int Urogynecol J ; 22(6): 739-42, 2011 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21311870

RESUMEN

INTRODUCTION AND HYPOTHESIS: To exclude a neuromuscular denervation damage due to prosthetic mini-invasive surgery using transobturator tape (TOT) by pre and postoperative electromyography (EMG) of the striated urethral sphincter. METHODS: Seventeen women with SUI were enrolled by urogynecologic and urodynamic examination. Each of them underwent EMG of striated urethral sphincter performed by 25-mm concentric needle that was put in as far as 5 mm inside internal urethral sphincter. Amplitude and duration of EMG potentials were measured during caught, maximal contraction, and at rest. Four months after TOT treatment women underwent EMG. RESULTS: The mean amplitude of EMG potentials does not show significant statistical differences between pre- and post-TOT (P=NS). The duration of potentials, instead, changed between pre and posttreatment only during the maximal contraction test (P ≤ 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: TOT prosthesis surgery, avoiding denervation and devascularization of pelvic structures does not produce damage of the urethral sphincter.


Asunto(s)
Músculo Esquelético/inervación , Uretra/inervación , Incontinencia Urinaria de Esfuerzo/cirugía , Anciano , Electromiografía , Femenino , Humanos , Persona de Mediana Edad , Procedimientos Quirúrgicos Mínimamente Invasivos/efectos adversos , Músculo Esquelético/lesiones , Músculo Esquelético/fisiología , Proyectos Piloto , Periodo Posoperatorio , Periodo Preoperatorio , Estudios Prospectivos , Cabestrillo Suburetral , Traumatismos del Sistema Nervioso , Uretra/lesiones , Uretra/fisiología , Procedimientos Quirúrgicos Urológicos/efectos adversos
3.
J Prenat Med ; 4(2): 22-5, 2010 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22439056

RESUMEN

Postpartum period is distinct in three phases. The third phase is the delayed postpartum period, which can last up to 6 months. Some changes to the genitourinary system are much longer in resolving, and some may never fully revert to the prepregnant state. A burgeoning volume of literature on pelvic floor support implicates childbirth as the initiation of a whole host of conditions including stress urinary incontinence, incontinence of flatus or feces, uterine prolapse, cystocele, and rectocele. The duration and severity of these conditions affect many variables, including the patient's intrinsic collagen support, the size of the infant, the route of delivery, and the degree of perineal trauma occurring either naturally (lacerations) or iatrogenically (episiotomy).

4.
J Prenat Med ; 4(1): 1-4, 2010 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22439051

RESUMEN

Pregnancy can affect the lower genitourinary tract through physiologic changes, or traumatic injury tissue stretching and tearing, besides neurologic and vascular compression and compromise, and muscle strain are inevitable during childbirth.The levator ani complex of the pubococcygeus, puborectalis, and iliococcygeus muscles must allow passage of the fetus. The perineal body and external anal sphincter may become injured, with or without episiotomy, but sometimes as a necessary maneuver to allow passage of the fetal head or shoulders. The traumatic insults may lead to permanent damage on pelvic floor and subsequent urinary or anal incontinence.In this article we aim to review the literature regarding the impact of pregnancy or childbirth on pelvic floor changes.

5.
J Prenat Med ; 4(1): 12-6, 2010 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22439054

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVE: Antepartum haemorrhage (APH) defined as bleeding from the genital tract in the second half of pregnancy, remains a major cause of perinatal mortality and maternal morbidity in the developed world. RESULTS: In approximately half of all women presenting with APH, a diagnosis of placental abruption or placenta praevia will be made; no firm diagnosis will be made in the other half even after investigations. CONCLUSION: In cases presenting with APH, the evaluation consists of history, clinical signs and symptoms and once the mother is stabilized, a speculum examination and an ultrasound scan.A revision of the literature was mode only larger prospective tials or case-control study were taken into account.

6.
J Prenat Med ; 4(1): 5-8, 2010 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22439052

RESUMEN

In women Obesity has a significant impact on every aspect of female reproductive life both in terms of infertility and early pregnancy complications. It is linked to a number of adverse obstetric outcomes as well as increased maternal and neonatal morbidity and mortality. These complications include miscarriage, congenital abnormalities, pre-eclampsia, gestational diabetes mellitus, iatrogenic preterm delivery, post-dates pregangy with increased rates of induction of labour, caesarian section and complications during and following operative procedures, post-partum haemorrhage, shoulder dystocia, infection, venous thromboembolism and increased hospital day. It is important to consider obese pregnant women as a high risk group with a linear increase in risk of complications associated with their degree of obesity.

7.
J Prenat Med ; 4(4): 59-62, 2010 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22439063

RESUMEN

In women who develop preeclampsia there is a pathological increase in placental vascular resistance should be detectable by abnormal Dopplerf low studies of the maternal uterine vessels. In women considered at low risk with abnormal early pregnancy uterine artery Doppler studies are needed. Until such time as these are available, routine uterine artery Doppler screening of women considered at low risk is not recommended. Uterine artery Doppler screening of high-risk women appears to identify those at substantially increased risk for adverse pregnancy outcomes and interventions that might improve clinical outcomes.Abnormal testing in these women could potentially lead to increased surveillance and interventions that might improve clinical outcomes.

8.
J Prenat Med ; 3(4): 57-9, 2009 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22439048

RESUMEN

Pelvic-perineal dysfunctions, are the most common diseases in women after pregnancy. Urinary incontinence and genital prolapsy, often associated, are the most important consequences of childbirth and are determined by specific alterations in the structure of neurological and musculo-fascial pelvic support.Causation is difficult to prove because symptom occur remote from delivery.Furthermore it is unclear whether changes are secondary to the method of childbirth or to the pregnancy itself.This controversy fuels the debate about whether or not women should be offered the choice of elective caesarean delivery to avoid the development of subsequent pelvic floor disfunction.But it has been demonstrated that pregnancy itself, by means of mechanical changes of pelvic statics and changes in hormones, can be a significant risk factor for these diseases. Especially is the first child to be decisive for the stability of the pelvic floor.During pregnancy, the progressive increase in volume of the uterus subject perineal structures to a major overload. During delivery, the parties present and passes through the urogenital hiatus leading to growing pressure on the tissues causing the stretching of the pelvic floor with possible muscle damage, connective tissue and / or nervous.In this article we aim to describe genitourinary post partum changes with particular attention to the impact of pregnancy or childbirth on these changes.

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