The usefulness of MR defecography in the evaluation of pelvic floor dysfunction: our experience using 3T MRI
Publication Type
Original research
Authors

Abstract

Purpose: To assess the usefulness of MR defecography in evaluating pelvic floor dysfunction, and to correlate several pelvic organ abnormalities with each other and with patients' symptoms and characteristics.

Methods: MR defecographic examinations performed in 3T MRI machine of 95 patients (70 females, 25 males; mean age 48) were retrospectively reviewed. Pelvic organ abnormalities from all three compartments were recorded, including the anorectal junction descent, anterior rectocele, and cystocele. These were graded according to the known HMO system in relation to the pubococcygeal line. The correlation between these different abnormalities and their relation to patient symptoms and characteristics were evaluated.

Results: Anorectal junction descent and anterior rectocele were most commonly observed, predominantly manifesting in female patients. Both were associated with abnormalities from all compartments. The middle compartment was the least affected, and its abnormality of uterine/vaginal descent tended to occur in association with the anterior compartment abnormality (cystocele). Anismus was low in incidence, and was not associated with other compartments abnormalities. Both enterocele/peritoneocele and intussusception were uncommon.

Conclusion: MR defecography is the modality of choice in assessing pelvic floor dysfunction, because it can neatly show various pelvic organ abnormalities from all compartments in a dynamic fashion, which are frequently coexistent. It can even show clinically silent or unsuspected abnormalities which can impact the management of patients.

Keywords: Anorectal junction; Anterior rectocele; Cystocele; MR defecography; Uterine descent.

Journal
Title
Abdominal Radiology
Publisher
springer
Publisher Country
United States of America
Indexing
Scopus
Impact Factor
2.153
Publication Type
Both (Printed and Online)
Volume
42
Year
2017
Pages
2219–2224