Duke urogynecologist Anthony Visco, MD, is happy
to tell women about a minimally invasive cure for a minimally
talked-about problem: pelvic floor
prolapse.
What exactly is prolapse?
The word literally means “falling out of place.” Prolapse of
a woman’s pelvic floor organs -- vagina, uterus, bladder, or
rectum -- can happen when tissues or muscles in the pelvis
weaken. It can result from childbirth, chronic coughing or
straining, or just simply from getting older -- but it’s not an
old person’s disease. It can happen at any age.
Is it common?
It’s pretty common, but most women consider prolapse a
private condition and aren’t inclined to talk about it -- even
though it can have a drastic effect on their day-to-day
lives.
What do you want women to know about prolapse?
Well, for one, I think women should know that treatments for
prolapse are really improving. In fact, this condition is at
the forefront of surgical technology.
How so?
First of all, prolapse can be managed nonsurgically, but
this won’t make it go away. There is a surgical treatment
called colpopexy which can cure prolapse. Until recently, it
required a long abdominal incision, but now robotic surgery is
making the cure much easier on patients.
That sounds futuristic.
It does, but we’re using robotics right now. Robotic surgery
gives women a gold-standard repair with a minimally invasive
approach. Instead of using a long incision, I make a few tiny
incisions using the robot’s arms. Women recover quickly and
there is a low risk of complications. Most women go home the
morning after the procedure. We offer this procedure in both
Raleigh and Durham.
So to learn more, just talk to you about it?
That’s a
very good start.
About This Page
Published: June 26, 2008
Updated: June 26, 2008
URL: http://www.dukehealth.org/HealthLibrary/HealthArticles/20080626140125931