Affiliation:
1. West China Second University Hospital of Sichuan University
Abstract
Abstract
Purpose: To accurately measure the vaginal mucosa thickness across different age groups by histopathologic techniques and to investigate the factors that may influence the thickness changes.
Methods:A retrospective analysis was conducted on clinical data from 348 patients who underwent local vaginal wall resection at the West China Second University Hospital, Sichuan University, from January 2021 and May 2022. The thickness of vaginal mucosa, epithelium and lamina propria was measured precisely under the microscope. And the 10th, 25th, 50th, 75th, and 90th percentile values of vaginal mucosa thickness across different age groups were counted and charted a dot-line plot .
Result: The percentile values for vaginal mucosa thickness exhibited a decreasing trend with increasing age; vaginal mucosa thickness showed significant correlations with times of delivery (P=0.031) and age (P<0.001), both of which were negatively associated. And vaginal mucosa thickness demonstrated no significant correlation with body mass index (BMI) (P=0.325), times of abortions (P=0.511), times of gestation (P=0.101), menstrual cycle (P=0.533), or types of delivery (P=0.056); epithelial thickness showed significant associations with age (P<0.001) and types of delivery (P=0.017), both of which were negative correlations. Moreover, BMI (P= 0.429), times of abortions (P=0.764), delivery (P=0.079), gestation (P=0.475), and menstrual cycle (P=0.950) were nonassociated with epithelial thickness; lamina propria thickness displayed a significant correlation only with age (P=0.002), and there were no obvious correlations observed between lamina propria thickness and BMI (P=0.374), times of abortion (P=0.417), delivery (P=0.053), gestation (P=0.101), types of delivery (P=0.132) and menstrual cycle (P=0.495). Moreover, when the age segmentation was thresholded at 35 and 50 years, both epithelial thickness and vaginal mucosa thickness were significantly correlated with age (P< 0.05). Lamina propria thickness was associated with age when the age threshold was set at 35 years (P=0.007), whereas it showed no strong link with age when the age threshold was 50 years (P=0.072).
Conclusion: This study revealed a strong link between vaginal mucosa thickness and age, with epithelium likely playing a predominant role, while the association with lamina propria appeared to be less significant. The potential relationship with the lamina propria needs to be explored on the basis of a larger sample size for further study.
Publisher
Research Square Platform LLC