Login / Signup

Pubourethral and uterosacral male analogues suggest parallel male/female pelvic anatomy and symptom pathogenesis.

Ahmed FaragSidi MuctarBernhard Liedl
Published in: Annals of translational medicine (2024)
The thesis that functional/dysfunctional male/female pelvic floor anatomy are parallel, originated from two studies: a successful retropubic perineal male sling for post-prostatectomy stress urinary incontinence (SUI) and discovery of a male uterosacral ligament (USL) analogue, we named "prostatosacral ligament" (PSL). In 25 out of the studied 27 males (92.6%), it starts on both sides of the median sulcus of the prostate the ligament passes lateral to the rectum being fused with the lateral margin of the mesorectum before leaving it as it thins out to be attached posteriorly similar to the USL. The ultrasound data during straining in men and women showed the same three oppositely acting muscle vectors contracting around analogous ligaments, puboprostatic ligament (PPL) (male), and pubourethral ligament (PUL) (female). Further parallels were pubovesical ligaments (PVLs) and arc of Gilvernet as part of the continence and micturition mechanisms. Impressive evidence for parallel anatomy came from the successful cure of 22 males with post-prostatectomy SUI using a perineal retropubic tissue fixation system (TFS) minisling applied to the PPL using a similar methodology to that used in the female for PUL midurethral sling repair for cure of SUI. Laparoscopic evidence confirmed the prostate as a male analogue of the cervix, and PSLs as analogues of USLs: PSL origin from the prostate attached laterally to the mesorectum and inserted into the sacrum. Histologically, PSLs had identical features with USLs: collagen, elastin, smooth muscle, blood vessels and nerves. Virtually identical symptoms for "chronic prostatitis" (CP) and "posterior fornix syndrome" (PFS), such as chronic pelvic pain, overactive bladder (OAB), abnormal emptying, gave birth to the hypothesis, of a common pathogenesis for "CP" and "PFS", USL (or PSL) laxity. If this could be proven by "simulated operations", "CP", at least in theory, may be potentially correctible by PSL repair.
Keyphrases