Selected article for: "lower mean and magnetic resonance"

Author: Laitakari, K E; Mäkelä-Kaikkonen, J K; Pääkkö, E; Kata, I; Ohtonen, P; Mäkelä, J; Rautio, T T
Title: Restored pelvic anatomy is preserved after laparoscopic and robot-assisted ventral rectopexy: MRI-based 5-year follow-up of a randomised controlled trial.
  • Cord-id: yy4aq0t8
  • Document date: 2020_6_16
  • ID: yy4aq0t8
    Snippet: AIM We compared the long-term anatomical outcomes between robot-assisted (RVMR) and laparoscopic ventral mesh rectopexy (LVMR) for external or internal rectal prolapse. METHOD This study is a follow-up of a single centre randomised controlled trial (RCT). Thirty patients were randomly allocated to RVMR (n=16) and LVMR (n = 14). The primary endpoint was the maintenance of the restored pelvic anatomy 5 years after the operation as assessed by magnetic resonance (MR) defaecography. Secondary outcom
    Document: AIM We compared the long-term anatomical outcomes between robot-assisted (RVMR) and laparoscopic ventral mesh rectopexy (LVMR) for external or internal rectal prolapse. METHOD This study is a follow-up of a single centre randomised controlled trial (RCT). Thirty patients were randomly allocated to RVMR (n=16) and LVMR (n = 14). The primary endpoint was the maintenance of the restored pelvic anatomy 5 years after the operation as assessed by magnetic resonance (MR) defaecography. Secondary outcome measures included the Pelvic Organ Prolapse Quantification (POP-Q) measures and functional results assessed using symptom questionnaires. RESULTS Twenty-six patients (14 RVMR and 12 LVMR) completed the 5-year follow-up and were included in the study. The MR imaging (MRI) results, POP-Q measurements and symptom-specific quality of life measures did not differ between the RVMR and LVMR groups. The MRI measurements of the total study population remained unchanged between 3 months and 5 years. In the pelvic floor distress inventory (PFDI-20), the RVMR group had lower symptom scores (mean 96.0, SD 70.7) than the LVMR group (mean 160.6, SD 58.9; p=0.004). In the subscales of pelvic organ prolapse (POPDI-6) (mean 23.2, SD 24.3 vs mean 52.4, SD 22.4; p=0.001) and the colorectal-anal distress inventory (CRADI-8) (mean 38.4, SD 23.3 vs mean 58.6, SD 25.4; p=0.009), the patients in the RVMR group had significantly better outcomes. CONCLUSION After VMR, the corrected anatomy was preserved. There were no clinically significant differences in anatomical results between the RVMR and LVMR procedures 5 years after surgery based on MR defaecography. However functional outcomes were better after RMVR.

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