Introduction: Recent publications of interstitial cystitis (IC)/bladder pain syndrome cure by a gynecological prolapse protocol, run counter to traditional treatments such as bladder installations which do not offer such cure. The prolapse protocol, uterosacral ligament (USL) repair, is based on the 'Posterior Fornix Syndrome' (PFS). PFS was described in the 1993 iteration of the Integral Theory. PFS comprises predictably co-occurring symptoms of frequency, urgency, nocturia, chronic pelvic pain, abnormal emptying and post-void residual urine, caused by USL laxity and cured or improved by repair thereof.
Material And Methods: analysis and interpretation of published data showing cure of IC by USL repair.
Results: In many women, USL pathogenesis of IC can be explained by the effect of weak or loose USLs weakening two pelvic muscles which contract against them, levator plate (LP) and conjoint longitudinal muscle of the anus (LMA). The now weakened pelvic muscles cannot stretch the vagina sufficiently to prevent afferent impulses from urothelial stretch receptors 'N' reaching the micturition centre where they are interpreted as urge. The same unsupported USLs cannot support the visceral sympathetic/parasympathetic visceral autonomic nerve plexuses (VP). The pathway of multiple referred pelvic pains is explained as follows: groups of afferent VP axons stimulated by gravity or muscle movements fire off 'rogue' impulses, which are interpreted by the cortex as end-organ chronic pelvic pain (CPP) from several end organs; this explains how CPP is invariably perceived in several sites. Reports of cure of non-Hunner's and Hunner's IC are analysed with diagrams which explain co-occurrence of IC with urge and phenotypes of chronic pelvic pain from several different sites.
Conclusions: A gynecological schema cannot explain all IC phenotypes, especially male IC. However, for those women who obtain relief from the predictive speculum test, there is a significant possibility of cure of both the pain and the urge by uterosacral ligament repair. In this context, it may well be in such female patients' interests, at least in the exploratory diagnostic phase, for ICS/BPS to be subsumed into the PFS disease category. It would give such women a significant chance of cure, something denied to them for now.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.5173/ceju.2022.106 | DOI Listing |
Womens Health Rep (New Rochelle)
January 2025
University of Pécs Institute of Physiotherapy and Sports Science, Pécs, Hungary.
Background: Our study aimed to perform Hungarian cross-cultural adaptation and assess the reliability and validity of the Pain Self-Efficacy Questionnaire (PSEQ) in women diagnosed with endometriosis and chronic pelvic pain.
Methods: The current study was conducted in Hungary among women aged 18-50 (34.39 ± 6.
Objectives: An emerging concept in the chronic pain literature, high-impact chronic pain (HICP), refers to pain that occurs very frequently and results in major disruption of daily life. Previous epidemiologic investigations have noted that lower educational attainment, age, and race appear to be associated with the frequency of HICP, but condition-specific investigations of HICP have been less common.
Methods: Here we investigate HICP status and its clinical/demographic correlates in the Multidisciplinary Approach to the study of chronic Pelvic Pain research network Symptom Pattern Study.
Eur Urol Focus
January 2025
Medical School of Nantong University, Nantong, China; Department of Urology, Jiangnan University Medical Center, Wuxi, China. Electronic address:
Interstitial cystitis/bladder pain syndrome (IC/BPS) is a chronic and debilitating condition characterized by pelvic pain and urinary urgency and frequency with an unclear etiology. Emerging evidence implicates microbiome dysbiosis-disruptions in the microbial communities inhabiting the body-in IC/BPS pathophysiology. This review synthesizes the literature on microbial alterations in IC/BPS, including urinary, vaginal, and gastrointestinal microbiota, and their interactions with host inflammatory and metabolic pathways.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMJ Case Rep
January 2025
Department of Orthopedics, SDM College of Medical Sciences and Hospital, Shri Dharmasthala Manjunatheshwara University, Dharwad, Karnataka, India.
Low back pain is common in women, especially during pregnancy and puerperium. Septic sacroiliitis, a rare cause of back pain in the postpartum period can mimic other common causes of low back pain like muscle strain, urinary tract infection, pelvic inflammatory disease, endometritis and intervertebral disc prolapse. The proximity of the sacroiliac joint to the sacral nerve plexus results in septic sacroiliitis frequently presenting with symptoms mimicking intervertebral disc prolapse.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Arthroplasty
January 2025
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Division of Lower Limb Reconstruction, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
Background: Pelvic discontinuity (PD) poses a difficult challenge in revision total hip arthroplasty (rTHA). There is a paucity of evidence assessing five- to ten-year outcomes of cup cages for PD. This study aimed to review the survivorship and outcomes of cup-cage constructs for PD.
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