PELVIC ORGAN PROLAPSE
A 62-year-old woman complains of low back pain and perineal pressure for
18 months. She had been recommended by another physician to wear a
pessary, which she is reluctant to do. On pelvic examination a second-
degree uterine prolapse with a cystocele and a rectocele is observed.
The pelvic floor is made up of the diaphragm and perineal membrane.
The etiology of pelvic relaxation is most commonly related to childbirth. The
mechanical trauma of childbirth stresses and tears the supporting ligaments of
the pelvic retroperitoneum in the pelvis, whose main function is to support the
pelvic viscera. Advancing age and obesity are risk factors for pelvic organ
prolapse (POP).
The components of pelvic relaxation include uterine prolapse, cystocele,
rectocele, and enterocele. Lesser forms of pelvic relaxation include vaginal or
vault prolapse.
The pelvic diaphragm consists of the levator ani and coccygeus muscles. The
levator ani consists of three muscles: puborectalis, pubococcygeus, and
iliococcygeus.
The perineal membrane is a triangular sheet of dense fibromuscular tissue
that spans the anterior half of the pelvic outlet. The vagina and the urethra
pass through the perineal membrane (urogenital diaphragm).
The main structures that support the uterus are the cardinal ligaments, the
uterosacral ligaments, and the endopelvic fascia.