The Secret about Down There: Pelvic Floor and Bladder Edition Harriette M. Scarpero, MD.

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The Secret about “Down There”: Pelvic Floor and Bladder Edition Harriette M. Scarpero, MD

Transcript of The Secret about Down There: Pelvic Floor and Bladder Edition Harriette M. Scarpero, MD.

Page 1: The Secret about Down There: Pelvic Floor and Bladder Edition Harriette M. Scarpero, MD.

The Secret about “Down There”:

Pelvic Floor and Bladder Edition

Harriette M. Scarpero, MD

Page 2: The Secret about Down There: Pelvic Floor and Bladder Edition Harriette M. Scarpero, MD.

Why is “Down There”a Secret?

• We don’t learn much about our bodies in school

• Not much attention paid to pelvic health in health related media:

Name one American female celebrity who

conquered urinary incontinence….

Now name one who has conquered obesity….

Page 3: The Secret about Down There: Pelvic Floor and Bladder Edition Harriette M. Scarpero, MD.

Are We Really in the Dark about the Pelvis?

• How many of you know the meaning of ED? (thank you Viagra)

• How many of you know the meaning of PFD ?

Page 4: The Secret about Down There: Pelvic Floor and Bladder Edition Harriette M. Scarpero, MD.

PFD = PELVIC FLOOR DISORDERS

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What is the Pelvic Floor?

• It is composed of bony structures:

pubic bone- front

sacrum- back

ischial spines- sides

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What is the Pelvic Floor?

• Muscles:

Puborectalis

Pubococcygeus

Iliococcygeus

(Levator Ani)

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What is the Pelvic Floor?

• Connective Tissue:

• Attaches muscles to bone and each other

• Carries nerves and blood vessels

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What is the Pelvic Floor?

• Pelvic Organs:

Uterus, ovaries, vagina

Bladder, pelvic ureters

Rectum

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Anatomy: Bladder

• The bladder is a small triangular & muscular organ that is suspended between the abdominal wall and the abdominal cavity.

• The vagina sits beneath it, the rectum to its left, and the uterus on top of it.

• The kidneys drain into the bladder continuously via long muscular tubes (ureters).

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Anatomy:The Urethra

• The urethra is a muscular tube and the channel out of which urine leaves the body.

• A circumferential muscle called the external sphincter sits at the middle of the urethra and helps prevent urine from spilling out.

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Urethral Support

Connective tissue surrounds, divides and supports the urethra on its top, bottom and sides

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Source: Brubaker L: Pelvic Floor Anatomy in “The Female Pelvic Floor.

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Function: Bladder has Two Jobs

• The job of the bladder is to provide a low pressure reservoir to store urine (storage).

• The bladder must also provide a sufficient muscular contraction to empty urine efficiently (emptying).

2 jobs = storage & emptying

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Continence = Control

• What gives us control over our bladder is:

– The brain

– Properties of the urethra (ligament support, seal of its lining, outer vascular layer compression)

– Tone of the urethral sphincter muscle (anatomy)

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Neuro Control of Bladder Function(overly simplified)

• The brain continuously inhibits the bladder

• The lower spinal cord acts as a hub for impulses travelling from the brain to the bladder.

• Bladder sensation begins in nerve endings in the bladder (stretch/pressure) and can trigger urination.

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What We Take for Granted

• Humans cannot see their bladders.

• Humans do not feel their bladders until a critical volume.

• The bladder is only partially under our control.

• A complex nerve pathway is at work to keep us dry and allow us to urinate

Bad brain = bad bladder

Same for SCI or nerve damage

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Who Can’t Take Her Bladder for Granted?Women with bladder fistula, spinal cord injury, occupations like fighter pilot,

and those with impaired mobility to name a few. Can you think of others?

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PFD = Pelvic Floor Disorders

• Urinary incontinence

• Pelvic Organ Prolapse

• Fecal incontinence

• Sexual dysfunction

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How big is PFD?

• number of US women with > 1 pelvic floor disorder will increase from 28.1 million in 2010 to 43.8 million in 2050

• number with UI will increase 55% from 18.3 million to 28.4 million

• number with POP will increase 46% from 3.3 to 4.9 million

• For fecal incontinence, the number will increase 59% from 10.6 to 16.8 million

Wu, Jennifer M. MD et al, Obstetrics & Gynecology Dec 2009

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If You Are Experiencing PFD Symptoms…

• Educate your self on PFD

• If seeking a specialist, look for one with additional training in pelvic floor disorders and a practice focus in the specialty

• Ask lots of questions- don’t just ask the what, ask the why

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Take Home Message

• Pelvic floor disorders are common and becoming more so

• They are Quality of Life issues and therefore are important, not the opposite

• Much more needs to be done to educate women about pelvic health