Validity of Estimation of Pelvic Floor Muscle Activity from Transperineal Ultrasound Imaging in Men.

To investigate the relationship between displacement of pelvic floor landmarks observed with transperineal ultrasound imaging and electromyography of the muscles hypothesised to cause the displacements.Three healthy men participated in this study, which included ultrasound imaging of the mid-urethra...

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Main Authors: Ryan E Stafford, Geoff Coughlin, Nicholas J Lutton, Paul W Hodges
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4671687?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-b7a9a2e68fc2404587b920728953ff9f2020-11-25T01:22:07ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-011012e014434210.1371/journal.pone.0144342Validity of Estimation of Pelvic Floor Muscle Activity from Transperineal Ultrasound Imaging in Men.Ryan E StaffordGeoff CoughlinNicholas J LuttonPaul W HodgesTo investigate the relationship between displacement of pelvic floor landmarks observed with transperineal ultrasound imaging and electromyography of the muscles hypothesised to cause the displacements.Three healthy men participated in this study, which included ultrasound imaging of the mid-urethra, urethra-vesical junction, ano-rectal junction and bulb of the penis. Fine-wire electromyography electrodes were inserted into the puborectalis and bulbocavernosus muscles and a transurethral catheter electrode recorded striated urethral sphincter electromyography. A nasogastric sensor recorded intra-abdominal pressure. Tasks included submaximal and maximal voluntary contractions, and Valsalva. The relationship between each of the parameters measured from ultrasound images and electromyography or intra-abdominal pressure amplitudes was described with nonlinear regression.Strong, non-linear relationships were calculated for each predicted landmark/muscle pair for submaximal contractions (R2-0.87-0.95). The relationships between mid-urethral displacement and striated urethral sphincter electromyography, and bulb of the penis displacement and bulbocavernosus electromyography were strong during maximal contractions (R2-0.74-0.88). Increased intra-abdominal pressure prevented shortening of puborectalis, which resulted in weak relationships between electromyography and anorectal and urethravesical junction displacement during all tasks.Displacement of landmarks in transperineal ultrasound imaging provides meaningful measures of activation of individual pelvic floor muscles in men during voluntary contractions. This method may aid assessment of muscle function or feedback for training.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4671687?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ryan E Stafford
Geoff Coughlin
Nicholas J Lutton
Paul W Hodges
spellingShingle Ryan E Stafford
Geoff Coughlin
Nicholas J Lutton
Paul W Hodges
Validity of Estimation of Pelvic Floor Muscle Activity from Transperineal Ultrasound Imaging in Men.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Ryan E Stafford
Geoff Coughlin
Nicholas J Lutton
Paul W Hodges
author_sort Ryan E Stafford
title Validity of Estimation of Pelvic Floor Muscle Activity from Transperineal Ultrasound Imaging in Men.
title_short Validity of Estimation of Pelvic Floor Muscle Activity from Transperineal Ultrasound Imaging in Men.
title_full Validity of Estimation of Pelvic Floor Muscle Activity from Transperineal Ultrasound Imaging in Men.
title_fullStr Validity of Estimation of Pelvic Floor Muscle Activity from Transperineal Ultrasound Imaging in Men.
title_full_unstemmed Validity of Estimation of Pelvic Floor Muscle Activity from Transperineal Ultrasound Imaging in Men.
title_sort validity of estimation of pelvic floor muscle activity from transperineal ultrasound imaging in men.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description To investigate the relationship between displacement of pelvic floor landmarks observed with transperineal ultrasound imaging and electromyography of the muscles hypothesised to cause the displacements.Three healthy men participated in this study, which included ultrasound imaging of the mid-urethra, urethra-vesical junction, ano-rectal junction and bulb of the penis. Fine-wire electromyography electrodes were inserted into the puborectalis and bulbocavernosus muscles and a transurethral catheter electrode recorded striated urethral sphincter electromyography. A nasogastric sensor recorded intra-abdominal pressure. Tasks included submaximal and maximal voluntary contractions, and Valsalva. The relationship between each of the parameters measured from ultrasound images and electromyography or intra-abdominal pressure amplitudes was described with nonlinear regression.Strong, non-linear relationships were calculated for each predicted landmark/muscle pair for submaximal contractions (R2-0.87-0.95). The relationships between mid-urethral displacement and striated urethral sphincter electromyography, and bulb of the penis displacement and bulbocavernosus electromyography were strong during maximal contractions (R2-0.74-0.88). Increased intra-abdominal pressure prevented shortening of puborectalis, which resulted in weak relationships between electromyography and anorectal and urethravesical junction displacement during all tasks.Displacement of landmarks in transperineal ultrasound imaging provides meaningful measures of activation of individual pelvic floor muscles in men during voluntary contractions. This method may aid assessment of muscle function or feedback for training.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4671687?pdf=render
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