“…This part of the uterus can probably be damaged with excessive or forceful dilatation, and it is believed that this isthmic region is important in the normal functions of nidation and maintenance of pregnancy (Youssef, 1958~). Among previous attempts to estimate the width of the uterine isthmus under different conditions, the two most comprehensive studies have been by Asplund (1952) and Youssef (1958aYoussef ( , 1958b, while Mann (1963) reported an extensive investigation of the uterus in primary dysmenorrhoea. Techniques used have included hysterography (Asplund, 1952;Rubovits et al, 1953) or "isthmography" (Youssef, 1958a), the injection of Lipoidol into the uterus by a colpotomy incision (Youssef, 1958a), percutaneous retrograde iliac arteriography combined with hysterography (Borell and Fernstrom, 1953), the attempted passage of Hegar dilators (Rubovits eta/., 1953), traction of a Foley catheter (Bergman and Svennerund, 1957) and the observation by cineradiography of the passage of an intra-uterine balloon filled with radio-opaque media (Mann, 1963).…”