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Vaginal Vault Prolapse Sheffield

Professor Swati Jha

MD | FRCOG | Honorary Professor | RCOG Subspecialty Trained Urogynaecologist
★★★★★ 4.98/5 Doctify Rating (182+ verified reviews)

At a glance: Vaginal Vault Prolapse Sheffield

Vaginal vault prolapse — where the top of the vagina descends after a hysterectomy — is one of my areas of subspecialty expertise. I assess and treat vaginal vault prolapse in Sheffield. I look carefully at the top of the vagina, bladder, bowel, pelvic floor support and urinary symptoms before advising treatment. Options may include pelvic floor physiotherapy, vaginal oestrogen, a vaginal pessary, sacrospinous fixation, sacrocolpopexy or further surgery if the prolapse has come back. My aim is to explain the choices clearly so you understand what is causing the bulge, what can be treated without surgery and when surgery may be appropriate. I see patients at Spire Claremont Hospital and Circle Thornbury Hospital in Sheffield.

Vaginal Vault Prolapse Sheffield | Prof Swati Jha — Urogynaecologist

What Is Vaginal Vault Prolapse?

Vaginal vault prolapse is a specific type of pelvic organ prolapse that occurs after a hysterectomy — the surgical removal of the uterus. Once the uterus is removed, the top of the vagina (the "vault") can lose its structural support and descend into the vaginal canal. In more advanced cases, the vault may protrude through the vaginal opening.

In my practice, vault prolapse is one of the most technically demanding prolapse presentations I manage. It differs from cystocele (bladder prolapse) or rectocele (bowel prolapse) in that it specifically involves the apical compartment — the apex or highest point of the vaginal canal — and requires a distinct surgical approach to achieve durable correction.

Vault prolapse can occur alongside prolapse of the anterior or posterior vaginal walls, which is why a thorough assessment of all three compartments is essential before any surgical plan is made.

Why Does Vault Prolapse Occur?

The uterus plays a key structural role in maintaining the support of the vaginal apex. When it is removed — even with careful technique — the vault is left relying on its remaining ligamentous attachments, which may weaken over time.

Contributing factors I look for during assessment include:

  • Previous hysterectomy — the primary prerequisite for vault prolapse
  • Connective tissue weakness — often constitutional and present across the family
  • Obstetric history — particularly vaginal deliveries with prolonged second stage or instrumental delivery
  • Post-menopausal oestrogen deficiency — leading to atrophy and reduced tissue strength
  • Chronic straining — due to constipation, chronic cough, or heavy occupational lifting
  • High BMI — increasing intra-abdominal pressure chronically

Vault prolapse does not reflect any failure of the original hysterectomy in most cases. It is a recognised long-term consequence of hysterectomy that affects a significant proportion of women over time.

Symptoms of Vaginal Vault Prolapse

Symptoms vary with the degree of descent and with which adjacent compartments are also affected. My assessment focuses not on the anatomical stage alone, but on how your symptoms affect your daily life and quality of life.

Vaginal Bulge or Heaviness

A sensation of something coming down from the vagina — often described as a lump, ball or dragging feeling. Many women notice it worsens with prolonged standing or walking and improves when lying down.

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Bladder Symptoms

Difficulty emptying the bladder fully, a weak or intermittent urinary stream, the need to change position to pass urine, or urinary urgency and frequency. Incomplete bladder emptying can also predispose to recurrent urinary tract infections.

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Bowel Symptoms

Difficulty with defaecation, incomplete bowel emptying, or the need to digitally support the vagina or perineum to open the bowels. These symptoms are often more prominent when the posterior compartment is also involved.

Discomfort During Intercourse

Vault prolapse can cause dyspareunia (pain during sex), reduced sensation, or difficulty with penetration. This significantly affects quality of life and intimate relationships, and is a valid indication for surgical intervention.

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Lower Back or Pelvic Pain

A chronic aching or dragging sensation in the lower back and pelvis, often worse at the end of the day or after physical activity. The pain can be disproportionate to the anatomical degree of prolapse.

Visible Tissue at the Vaginal Opening

In more advanced vault prolapse (POP-Q stage III–IV), the vaginal vault may be visible or palpable at or beyond the vaginal introitus. This is often the point at which women seek urgent assessment.

When to seek assessment

You do not need to wait until symptoms are severe. I see many women early in the course of vault prolapse, when conservative measures can still be effective. Earlier assessment allows more options — surgical and non-surgical — to be considered.

When Is Surgery the Right Option?

Surgery for vaginal vault prolapse is not the automatic first step. The decision is made jointly, based on what matters most to you — and it depends on how much your symptoms affect your life, not on examination findings alone.

Surgery becomes the appropriate next step when:

  • Conservative management has not provided adequate or sustained relief
  • The vault prolapse is severe (POP-Q stage III–IV) and causing significant functional impairment
  • There is difficulty emptying the bladder or bowel due to the prolapse
  • Symptoms significantly affect sexual function, physical activity, or overall quality of life
  • A vaginal pessary is not tolerated, keeps falling out, or has failed to maintain symptom control
  • You want a durable anatomical correction rather than ongoing pessary management

I also see women with recurrent vault prolapse following a previous repair — where the surgical approach requires careful re-planning and often differs substantially from the original procedure.

Conservative Management First

Not all vault prolapse requires surgery. Many women manage their symptoms effectively without an operation, and conservative treatment does not preclude future surgery if needed.

Non-Surgical Options I Offer

  • Pelvic floor physiotherapy — supervised rehabilitation of the pelvic floor muscles
  • Vaginal pessary fitting and review — ring or shelf pessaries can be highly effective for vault prolapse, even in advanced cases
  • Vaginal oestrogen — particularly important in post-menopausal women to improve tissue quality before and after any intervention
  • Lifestyle modification — weight management, treating chronic constipation, and avoidance of straining

Surgical Options for Vaginal Vault Prolapse in Sheffield

Two main procedures address vault prolapse: laparoscopic sacrocolpopexy and sacrospinous fixation. Both restore apical support but differ in route, technique, and long-term outcomes. The choice depends on your fitness for laparoscopic surgery, your anatomy, surgical history, and your goals.

Preferred Approach — Keyhole Surgery

Laparoscopic Sacrocolpopexy

My preferred procedure for vaginal vault prolapse in suitable patients. The vaginal vault is attached to the anterior sacral ligament via a graft placed laparoscopically — providing robust, durable apical support without any transvaginal mesh.

  • Performed via 4–5 small laparoscopic ports under general anaesthetic
  • The graft is placed abdominally — not transvaginally — which has a substantially different risk profile from transvaginal mesh procedures
  • Can address anterior and posterior compartment prolapse simultaneously at the same operation
  • Best evidence base for long-term anatomical success for vault prolapse: subjective success rates of 85–95% at medium-term follow-up
  • Preserves vaginal length and sexual function
AnaestheticGeneral
Hospital StayOvernight
Return to Desk Work6–8 weeks
Lifting Restriction12 weeks

Vaginal Approach Alternative

Sacrospinous Fixation

A well-established vaginal procedure in which the vault is elevated and sutured to the sacrospinous ligament. An effective and appropriate alternative for women where laparoscopic surgery is not preferred or carries increased risk.

  • Performed entirely vaginally — no abdominal incisions
  • Uses the patient's own native tissue throughout — no graft or mesh required
  • Shorter operative time and can be performed under regional anaesthesia if needed
  • Can be combined with anterior or posterior colporrhaphy at the same sitting
  • Temporary buttock or thigh pain (pudendal neuropraxia) occurs in approximately 10% of cases and usually resolves within weeks
AnaestheticGeneral or Regional
Hospital Stay1–2 nights
Return to Desk Work4–6 weeks
Lifting Restriction12 weeks

Procedure Comparison at a Glance

Feature Laparoscopic Sacrocolpopexy Sacrospinous Fixation
Surgical route Laparoscopic (abdominal) Vaginal
Anaesthetic General General or regional
Operative time 90–120 minutes 45–75 minutes
Hospital stay Overnight 1–2 nights
Graft / mesh used? Abdominal graft (not transvaginal mesh) No — native tissue only
Long-term success rate 85–95% subjective success at 5 years 75–85% subjective success at 5 years
Simultaneous compartment repairs? Yes Yes
Best suited for First-choice for fit patients; complex or recurrent vault prolapse Patients where laparoscopy carries higher risk; vaginal approach preferred
Return to desk work 6–8 weeks 4–6 weeks

Addressing Multiple Compartments at the Same Operation

Vault prolapse rarely exists in isolation. Many women have concurrent anterior wall prolapse (cystocele) and/or posterior wall prolapse (rectocele). Where this is the case, I address all affected compartments at the same surgical sitting — either combined with sacrocolpopexy, or alongside sacrospinous fixation with anterior and posterior colporrhaphy. This avoids the need for a staged approach and reduces overall recovery time.

→ Full range of prolapse surgery procedures in Sheffield

Why Vault Prolapse Surgery Should Be Performed by a Subspecialty Urogynaecologist

Vaginal vault prolapse — particularly recurrent or complex cases — is among the most demanding presentations in urogynaecology. The outcomes of sacrocolpopexy and sacrospinous fixation are strongly correlated with surgical volume and subspecialty experience. This is not a procedure where generalist expertise translates directly.

01

RCOG Subspecialty Accreditation

I hold RCOG subspecialty accreditation in urogynaecology — the only postgraduate qualification in the UK that specifically certifies expertise in this field. Very few private consultants in Sheffield or the wider region hold this accreditation.

02

High Surgical Volume

With over 3,000 prolapse procedures performed, vault prolapse surgery forms a core part of my practice — not a peripheral case. Volume is directly associated with surgical safety and outcome quality in laparoscopic pelvic floor surgery.

03

Complex & Recurrent Prolapse

I receive tertiary referrals for complex and recurrent vault prolapse from across Yorkshire and the Midlands. These cases require careful pre-operative assessment, a different approach from the index procedure, and experience with the anatomy altered by prior surgery.

04

NHS Mesh Complication Service

I lead the NHS Mesh Complication Service at Sheffield Teaching Hospitals — one of the designated national centres for mesh complication management. This work directly informs how I approach abdominal grafts in sacrocolpopexy and my position on avoiding transvaginal mesh entirely.

05

Academic & Research Background

As Professor of Urogynaecology at Sheffield Teaching Hospitals, my clinical decisions are grounded in current evidence. I contribute to the research base that informs national BSUG and RCOG guidelines on pelvic organ prolapse management.

06

Urodynamic Assessment Capability

Many women with vault prolapse have concurrent bladder symptoms. My practice includes full urodynamic assessment, allowing urinary incontinence and overactive bladder to be evaluated and addressed as part of the same management plan — without requiring separate referrals.

3,000+
Prolapse procedures performed
4.98
Average patient rating (182 reviews)
20+
Years subspecialty experience
2
Private hospital locations in Sheffield

Recovery After Vault Prolapse Surgery

Recovery timelines differ between laparoscopic sacrocolpopexy and sacrospinous fixation, but the pelvic floor healing principles are the same for both. The 12-week lifting restriction applies regardless of which procedure is performed.

After Laparoscopic Sacrocolpopexy

In Hospital (Day 1–2)

Most patients go home the morning after surgery. A urinary catheter is usually in place overnight. Light mobilisation is encouraged from the evening of surgery. Some bloating and shoulder-tip pain (from laparoscopic gas) is normal and resolves within 48 hours.

Weeks 1–2

Rest at home. Short, flat walks are encouraged from day two. Avoid driving for at least 2 weeks, or longer if you cannot perform an emergency stop comfortably. Shower normally; avoid baths or swimming until wounds have healed. Port-site wounds will have dissolvable sutures.

Weeks 3–6

Gradually increase activity. Most women can manage stairs, light household tasks, and short drives. Avoid lifting anything heavier than a full kettle. Vaginal bleeding or discharge may continue intermittently during this period — this is normal.

6–8 Weeks

Return to desk-based work. A clinic review is usually arranged at 6–8 weeks. Sexual intercourse can be resumed if the vault feels comfortable and there is no ongoing discharge. Continued pelvic floor exercises are recommended.

12 Weeks

Lifting restriction lifted. Return to gym, swimming, and more strenuous activities. Pelvic floor physiotherapy is strongly recommended as ongoing maintenance. Full anatomical healing continues over 6–12 months.

After Sacrospinous Fixation

In Hospital (Day 1–2)

Most women stay 1–2 nights. A catheter and vaginal pack may be in place for 24 hours post-operatively. Mobilisation begins the day after surgery. Buttock or thigh discomfort is common and relates to the suture placed near the sacrospinous ligament — this typically resolves within 2–4 weeks.

Weeks 1–2

Rest at home with short walks. Avoid driving for 2 weeks. The vaginal sutures are dissolvable and no removal is needed. A light vaginal discharge is normal. Avoid constipation — laxatives may be prescribed to prevent straining on the repair.

Weeks 3–4

Gradually increase walking and light activity. Most women feel significantly more comfortable by this point. Buttock pain, if present, usually resolves during this window. Avoid anything that involves bearing down, heavy lifting, or sustained Valsalva-type effort.

4–6 Weeks

Return to desk work and driving (if you can perform an emergency stop without discomfort). Clinic review is arranged. Sexual intercourse can be resumed if comfortable — not before 6 weeks. Pelvic floor physiotherapy should be commenced.

12 Weeks

Lifting restriction lifted. Return to sport, gym, and heavier activities. Long-term vaginal oestrogen (in post-menopausal women) is recommended to maintain tissue quality and optimise repair durability.

Optimising Long-Term Outcomes

Surgery corrects the anatomical defect — but long-term durability depends on ongoing pelvic floor health. I recommend pelvic floor physiotherapy after both procedures, long-term vaginal oestrogen where appropriate, management of constipation, and sustained weight management. These measures significantly reduce recurrence risk.

Risks and Realistic Outcomes

All surgical procedures carry risk. I discuss these with you in detail at consultation and again at pre-operative assessment. The following is a structured overview — not a substitute for that conversation.

Risks Common to Both Procedures

  • Bleeding — significant haemorrhage requiring transfusion is uncommon (<2%)
  • Infection — urinary tract infection, wound infection, or pelvic infection; antibiotic prophylaxis is given routinely
  • Deep vein thrombosis (DVT) / pulmonary embolism (PE) — prophylactic heparin and compression stockings are used
  • Bladder or ureteric injury — risk is approximately 1–2% for laparoscopic procedures; higher in revision surgery
  • Anaesthetic risk — discussed with your anaesthetist at pre-operative assessment
  • De novo stress urinary incontinence — unmasking of previously "occult" stress incontinence after prolapse repair occurs in approximately 10–15% of cases

Procedure-Specific Risks

  • Sacrocolpopexy — graft-related complications: graft exposure at the vaginal vault (approximately 2–5% with synthetic graft, lower with biological); may require local treatment or surgical revision
  • Sacrospinous fixation — buttock pain: transient neuropraxia of the pudendal nerve branches causes buttock and thigh pain in approximately 10% of cases; this almost always resolves spontaneously within 6–12 weeks
  • Recurrence: anatomical recurrence at 5 years is approximately 5–10% for sacrocolpopexy and 10–20% for sacrospinous fixation; symptomatic recurrence requiring further intervention is lower
  • Dyspareunia: new or worsened pain during intercourse occurs in a small proportion of women and usually improves with time and physiotherapy

For further information, see the BSUG patient information leaflets on vault prolapse surgery (British Society of Urogynaecology).

Frequently Asked Questions — Vaginal Vault Prolapse

These are the questions I hear most often during consultations. If your question is not covered here, please get in touch directly.

Book a Consultation in Sheffield

Same-week appointments available at Spire Claremont Hospital and Circle Thornbury Hospital. No GP referral required. I accept self-pay and all major private medical insurers.

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