Diagnostic accuracy and cut-off points for vaginal manometry to differentiate between weak and strong pelvic floor muscle contraction in pregnant women.

Braz J Phys Ther

Women's Health Research Laboratory, Physical Therapy Department, Universidade Federal de São Carlos, São Carlos, SP, Brazil. Electronic address:

Published: November 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • A study explored how well the Peritron™ manometer can identify weak versus strong pelvic floor muscle (PFM) contractions in pregnant women to aid in preventing issues during late pregnancy and after childbirth.
  • The research involved 44 women in their third trimester, comparing results from vaginal palpation to those from the manometry device, using various metrics such as maximal voluntary contraction (MVC) and contraction speed.
  • The findings indicated that peak MVC was the most effective measure for distinguishing contraction strength, with additional useful metrics being the MVC average, gradient, and area under the curve (AUCm).

Article Abstract

Background: Identifying a weak/strong pelvic floor muscle (PFM) contraction in pregnant women may help prevent and treat dysfunctions during late pregnancy and postpartum.

Objective: To determine whether the Peritron™ manometer can accurately differentiate a weak from a strong PFM contraction and the respective cut-offs for its variables in pregnant women.

Methods: This is a diagnostic accuracy study. Forty-four women in the third trimester of pregnancy participated (mean±SD age: 29±5 years). The reference test was vaginal palpation, and the index test was vaginal manometry (Peritron™ manometer). Variables assessed by vaginal manometry were rest, maximal voluntary contraction (MVC), MVC average, duration, gradient, area under the curve (AUCm), and contraction speed. The Receiver Operating Curve (AUC/ROC) was used to analyze the data and obtain cut-off points for these variables.

Results: Perfect discrimination (AUC=1.00) to differentiate between a weak/strong PFM contraction in pregnant women was observed for peak MCV (cut-off: 40.56 cmHO). The MVC average showed excellent discriminative ability (AUC=0.96; cut-off: 30.66 cmHO). The gradient variable (AUC=0.85; cut-off: 27.83 cmHO/s) and AUCm (AUC=0.86; cut-off: 1315.6 cm²*s) showed a good discriminative ability.

Conclusion: The best variables to discriminate between weak/strong PFM contraction in pregnant women using vaginal manometry were peak MVC, MVC average, gradient, and AUCm.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11459639PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bjpt.2024.101115DOI Listing

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