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HERO ID
5915483
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
A fiber-optic sensor-based device for the measurement of vaginal integrity in women
Author(s)
Parkinson, LA; Rosamilia, A; Mukherjee, S; Papageorgiou, AW; Melendez-Munoz, J; Werkmeister, JA; Gargett, CE; Arkwright, JW
Year
2019
Is Peer Reviewed?
1
Journal
Neurourology and Urodynamics
ISSN:
0733-2467
Volume
38
Issue
8
Page Numbers
2264-2272
Language
English
PMID
31385355
DOI
10.1002/nau.24130
Web of Science Id
WOS:000479520200001
Abstract
AIMS:
Pelvic floor disorders (PFDs) in women are a major public health concern. Current clinical methods for assessing PFDs are either subjective or confounded by interference from intra-abdominal pressure (IAP). This study introduces an intravaginal probe that can determine distributed vaginal pressure during voluntary exercises and measures the degree of vaginal tissue support independent of IAP fluctuations.
METHODS:
An intravaginal probe was fabricated with 18 independent fiber-optic pressure transducers positioned along its upper and lower blades. Continuous pressure measurement along the anterior and posterior vaginal walls during the automated expansion of the probe enabled the resistance of the tissue to be evaluated as a function of displacement, in a manner reflecting the elastic modulus of the tissue. After validation in a simulated vaginal phantom, in vivo measurements were conducted in the relaxed state and during a series of voluntary exercises to gauge the utility of the device in women.
RESULTS:
The probe reliably detected variations in the composition of sub-surface material in the vaginal phantom. During in-vivo measurements the probe detected distributed tissue elasticity in the absence of IAP change. In addition, the distribution of pressure along both anterior and posterior vaginal walls during cough, Valsalva and pelvic floor contraction was clearly resolved with a large variation observed between subjects.
CONCLUSIONS:
Our data highlight the potential for the probe to assess the integrity of the vagina wall and support structures as an integrated functional unit. Further in vivo trials are needed to correlate data with clinical findings to assist in the assessment of PFDs.
Keywords
medical device; optical fiber sensors; pelvic floor muscles; pelvic organ prolapse; vagina
Tags
PFAS
•
Additional PFAS (formerly XAgency)
Literature Search November 2019
PubMed
Web of Science
Not prioritized for screening
Perfluorodecanesulfonic acid
•
Expanded PFAS SEM (formerly PFAS 430)
Perfluorodecanesulfonate
Perfluorodecanesulfonic acid
•
PFAS Universe
Data Source
Web of Science
Pubmed
Perfluorodecanesulfonate
Perfluorodecanesulfonic acid
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