Division of Female Pelvic Medicine and Reconstructive Surgery, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Washington University in St. Louis, St Louis, MO.
Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, MO.
Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2018 Nov;219(5):497.e1-497.e13. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2018.06.014. Epub 2018 Jun 28.
Myofascial pain is characterized by the presence of trigger points, tenderness to palpation, and local or referred pain, and commonly involves the pelvic floor muscles in men and women. Pelvic floor myofascial pain in the absence of local or referred pain has also been observed in patients with lower urinary tract symptoms, and we have found that many patients report an improvement in these symptoms after receiving myofascial-targeted pelvic floor physical therapy.
We sought to systematically review the literature for examination techniques used to assess pelvic floor myofascial pain in women.
We performed a systematic literature search using strategies for the concepts of pelvic floor disorders, myofascial pain, and diagnosis in Ovid MEDLINE 1946-, Embase 1947-, Scopus 1960-, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects, and Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. Articles were screened by 3 authors and included if they contained a description of a pelvic myofascial physical examination.
In all, 55 studies met our inclusion criteria. Overall, examination components varied significantly among the included studies and were frequently undefined. A consensus examination guideline was developed based on the available data and includes use of a single digit (62%, 34/55) to perform transvaginal palpation (75%, 41/55) of the levator ani (87%, 48/55) and obturator internus (45%, 25/55) muscles with a patient-reported scale to assess the level of pain to palpation (51%, 28/55).
Physical examination methods to evaluate pelvic musculature for presence of myofascial pain varied significantly and were often undefined. Given the known role of pelvic floor myofascial pain in chronic pelvic pain and link between pelvic floor myofascial pain and lower urinary tract symptoms, physicians should be trained to evaluate for pelvic floor myofascial pain as part of their physical examination in patients presenting with these symptoms. Therefore, the development and standardization of a reliable and reproducible examination is needed.
肌筋膜疼痛的特征是存在触发点、触诊时的压痛以及局部或牵涉痛,通常还包括男性和女性的盆底肌肉。在没有局部或牵涉痛的情况下,也观察到下尿路症状患者存在盆底肌筋膜疼痛,我们发现许多患者在接受肌筋膜靶向盆底物理治疗后,这些症状得到改善。
我们旨在系统性地回顾文献,以探讨评估女性盆底肌筋膜疼痛的检查技术。
我们使用 Ovid MEDLINE 1946 年-、Embase 1947 年-、Scopus 1960 年-、Cochrane 对照试验中心注册库、疗效评价文摘数据库和 Cochrane 系统评价数据库中与盆底疾病、肌筋膜疼痛和诊断相关概念的策略进行了系统性文献检索。由 3 位作者筛选文章,如果文章包含盆底肌筋膜体格检查的描述,则将其纳入。
共有 55 项研究符合纳入标准。总体而言,纳入研究中的检查内容差异很大,且经常未明确定义。根据现有数据制定了共识检查指南,包括使用单个数字(62%,34/55)进行经阴道触诊(75%,41/55),触诊评估提肛肌(87%,48/55)和闭孔内肌(45%,25/55)的疼痛程度,并使用患者报告的量表进行评估(51%,28/55)。
评估盆底肌肉肌筋膜疼痛的体格检查方法差异很大,且经常未明确定义。鉴于盆底肌筋膜疼痛在慢性盆腔疼痛中的已知作用以及盆底肌筋膜疼痛与下尿路症状之间的联系,医生在对出现这些症状的患者进行体格检查时,应接受评估盆底肌筋膜疼痛的培训。因此,需要开发和标准化一种可靠且可重复的检查方法。