What’s
Up Down There™
In this column, Dr. Streicher answers questions posed
by her patients, or addresses cutting edge medical news. Check
back regularly to find out “What's Up Down There™!”
Uterine Prolapse
I’ve had a uterine prolapse for years, but now my uterus is
starting to poke outside my vagina. I tried a pessary, but it wasn’t
for me. I’m considering surgery, but I’m worried
about a long recovery and at 73, I feel like I’m too old to
go through it.
Uterine
prolapse is just what it sounds like. The uterus drops down into
the vagina, and in severe cases, outside the vagina due to
weak pelvic floor tissue. In mild cases most women aren’t even
aware that something has shifted. By the time a uterus protrudes
outside the vagina, most women are very aware that “something
has fallen.” Many women can feel or see a bulge at the vaginal
opening.
The experience of your uterus hanging outside your vagina is a somewhat
bizarre one, to say the least. As one patient was overheard saying
to a male medical student as she rolled into surgery, ”You
just have no idea what
it’s like having something hanging down between your legs all the time!” Just
when she realized what she had said, the anesthesiologist mercifully put her
to sleep.
Many women find that inserting a pessary (a diaphragm like device that
supports the uterus) significantly decreases their symptoms, but
as you point out, a pessary isn’t for everyone.
Surgical and anesthetic
techniques have evolved such that a 73-year-old in good general health
usually recovers well from surgery particularly since women who require
a hysterectomy for treatment of prolapse are often candidates for
a vaginal or laparoscopic approach. Recently I asked a 92-year-old
woman with a severe prolapse if she had ever considered a repair.
She responded, “I almost
had surgery 20 years ago, but I didn’t think I would get my money’s
worth! If I knew then what I know now, I most certainly would
have done it.” |