Validation of a Sagittal Section Technique for Measuring Clitoral Blood Flow. Volume Flow: A New Parameter in Clitoral Artery Doppler

Clitoral artery Doppler has been used as an objective technique to measure changes in genital women response. However, the technique has not been fully validated, and arterial volume flow has never been used as an outcome measure. To validate the technique clitoral artery Doppler measured in a sagit...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Journal of sexual medicine 2020-06, Vol.17 (6), p.1109-1117
Hauptverfasser: Fernández Pérez, Maite, Fernández Agís, Inmaculada, La Calle Marcos, Pedro, Campos Caballero, Raquel, Molero Rodríguez, Francisca, González Fernández, Mónica, Rodríguez Torreblanca, Carmelo
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Clitoral artery Doppler has been used as an objective technique to measure changes in genital women response. However, the technique has not been fully validated, and arterial volume flow has never been used as an outcome measure. To validate the technique clitoral artery Doppler measured in a sagittal section and explore arterial volume flow as a new parameter in clitoral Doppler. We examined 90 healthy volunteers by clitoral artery Doppler using the sagittal section approach described by Battaglia et al in 2008. We calculated intraobserver, interobserver, and intraobserver intersession variability and reliability for all Doppler parameters and described and validated arterial volume flow as a new parameter in clitoral artery Doppler. We calculated peak systolic velocity (PSV), time-averaged maximum velocity, time-averaged mean velocity, end-diastolic velocity, pulsatility index, resistance index, and volume flow (v-flow) in all groups. We conducted reliability analyses using the intraclass correlation coefficient for agreement. We explored differences between and within observers and calculated agreement limits using the Bland-Altman test. The intraclass correlation coefficient analysis showed correlation values higher than 0.75 (good reliability) for most of the variables and higher than 0.60 (moderate reliability) for the remaining ones. There were statistically significant differences between PSV and time-averaged maximum velocity in the intraobserver intersession measurements. For the remaining groups and variables, no statistically significant differences were observed. Bland-Altman analyses showed that the limits of agreement were acceptable and the regressions were not significant. The v-flow parameter also showed good reliability and low variability between groups. We found that PSV was not a good outcome measure because of its high intraobserver and intersession variability. Moreover, it is possible to measure v-flow in the clitoral artery using the sagittal technique described by Battaglia et al, and it seems that this measure is reliable and reproducible. This could be the best parameter to assess clinical changes. This study provided full validation of the sagittal section approach and of a new parameter, v-flow, which could beuseful for assessing clitoral blood flow. The main limitation of the study is its retrospective nature for validating v-flow. We found that clitoral artery Doppler measured using a sagittal approach is a valid and relia
ISSN:1743-6095
1743-6109
DOI:10.1016/j.jsxm.2020.01.031