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. 2008 Jul 30;8:13. doi: 10.1186/1471-2482-8-13

Table 9.

Frequency of the 6 main perineological symptoms and of the 3 signs of pudendal neuropathy according to the perineal descent measured with a Perineocaliper® [19,24].

Perineal descent Number of cases Urinary incontinence Faecal incontinence Prolapse 2–3 Dysuria Dyschesia Dyspareunia 3 signs
(n = 991) (n = 566) (n = 41) (n = 256) (n = 93) (n = 261) (n = 234) (n = 152/820)
-1 5 80 0 0 40 0 20 0
-0,5 7 42,85 0 42,85 0 14,28 14,28 0
0 227 51,54 1,32 21,58 10,13 24,22 14,53 13,87
0,5 257 50,19
(NS)
3,50
(NS)
20,62
(NS)
6,22
(NS)
15,95
(NS)
17,89
(NS)
17,28
(NS)
1 308 60,06
(p<0.05)
4,54
(p<0.05)
25
(NS)
8,76
(NS)
25,97
(NS)
27,59
(p<0.001)
18,41
(NS)
1,5 76 60,52
(NS)
3,94
(NS)
34,21
(p<0.05)
9,21
(NS)
35,52
(NS)
32,89
(p<0.001)
23,33
(NS)
2 82 75,60
(p<0.001)
12,19
(p<0.001)
43,90
(p<0.001)
13,41
(NS)
48,78
(p<0.001)
36,58
(p<0.001)
27,94
(p<0.01)
2,5 15 66,66 6,66 33,33 20 53,33 46,66 55,55
3 11 81,81 9,09 54,54 27,27 72,72 54,54 44,44
3,5 2 50 0 50 50 50 0 0

The p values were obtained using chi-squared tests; comparison with descent = 0. A perineal descent of 2 cm (compared to a 0 cm descent) leads to a significant increase in the frequency of urinary incontinence, faecal incontinence (solid stools), genital prolapse (grade 2 and more) and dyschesia. The same threshold exists for the 3 clinical signs of pudendal neuropathy (820 cases). For dyspareunia the threshold seems to be at 1 cm and in case of dysuria, the difference is significant between 0.5 cm and 2 cm of descent (p < 0.05).