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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0003128 (
anovulation
)
1,718
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Endometriosis is one of the most common conditions encountered in gynecology and the field of infertility. The clinical presentation depends on the location and the extent of disease, but the severity of symptoms does not correlate directly with the extent of disease. Symptoms of genital endometriosis may be categorized as menstrual dysfunction, ovulatory dysfunction, and reproductive dysfunction. With menstrual dysfunction, the frequent clinical symptoms are cyclic pelvic pain, dysmenorrhea, and dyspareunia. Endometriosis is commonly found to be the cause in younger patients with pain and dysmenorrhea, particularly when the clinician is aware of the appearance of atypical lesions. Types of ovulatory dysfunction reported to be associated with endometriosis include
anovulation
, premenstrual spotting, luteal phase defects, and LUF syndrome. The data are not sufficient to determine the prevalence of endometriosis, luteal phase defects, and hyperprolactinemia. With LUF syndrome, there are data to support an association, but more data on the frequency of LUF in consecutive normal cycles compared to consecutive cycles in women with endometriosis would be beneficial. A higher rate of infertility is reported in couples with endometriosis. Two approaches are used to evaluate spontaneous abortions and endometriosis. In retrospective studies, the abortion rates are higher in couples with endometriosis; however, when the pregnancy outcomes in untreated couples are studied, there is less evidence to support the association of a higher spontaneous abortion rate. Formerly, the diagnosis of endometriosis depended on the appearance of typical lesions. With the recognition of early or atypical lesions the histologic confirmation of glands and stroma is assuming a more prominent role. Noninvasive techniques such as assays of endometrial antibodies or CA-125 have certain limitations in terms of producing false-positive results and lacking predictability in early stages of disease. Ultrasonography and
MRI
give additional and confirmatory information. Most noninvasive techniques are ancillary in diagnosis and management. It still needs to be determined whether their routine use will give enough added information to justify their cost. Currently, the diagnosis of endometriosis is best made by histologic evidence of glands and stroma.
...
PMID:Clinical presentation and diagnosis of endometriosis. 266 21
The diseases of the ovary which most frequently cause infertility are:
anovulation
from follicular atresia, the empty follicle syndrome, the luteinized unruptured follicle syndrome; chronic
anovulation
syndromes, within which polycystic ovarian syndrome plays a major role; ovarian endometriosis. Sonography and Color Doppler US are the first choice procedures in the monitoring of ovarian cycles, which combined with serum hormone values, are able to identify possible changes in the physiologic sequence of the cycle. In follicular atresia, ovaries with minute follicles (3mm or less) and early disappearance of primary follicle are observed on sonography. The empty follicle syndrome characterized by the lack of oocytes within the primary follicle, is of difficult sonographic diagnosis, a possible sign being the missed visualization of cumulus oophorus. The luteinized unruptured follicle syndrome consists in the absence of oocyte expulsion from primary follicle persisting more than 48 hours after LH blood peak. Doppler spectra of blood flow in perifollicular ovarian arteries maintain the features of the follicular phase, i.e. low diastolic velocities and high resistances. Among chronic
anovulation
syndromes, hyper-and hypogonadotropism cause ovarian amenorrhea where ovaries are similar to those of women in menopause: small size, very few or absent follicles. The polycystic ovarian syndrome is characterized by an abnormal pulsatile GnRH release which causes LH hypersecretion and FSH hyposecretion. The latter is not able to stimulate the growth and maturation of follicles, while the former causes hyperandrogenism with hirsutism and obesity and is responsible for hypertrophy and stromal hyperechogenicity. The sonographic diagnosis of polycystic ovarian syndrome is based on standardized morphostructural signs as increased volume of the ovaries (> 10 cm3), the presence of numerous (> or = 10) peripheral microfollicles (< or = 5 mm) with hyperechoic stroma. The endometrial cyst, usually present in ovarian endometriosis is visualized with sonography as a round neoformation with ill-defined walls, filled with a uniformly hypoechoic, corpuscular, partly hemorrhagic fluid; less frequently the appearance is that of a more complex structure posing differential diagnostic problems, mainly with the hemorrhagic corpus luteum; both pathological conditions appear poorly vascularized at Color Doppler, with tracings of high resistance arterial flow. Among the procedures of second choice, CT can show the high blood density common to the two conditions while on
MRI
the signal is mostly hyperintense in T1-weighted sequences with areas of lower signal intensity in T2-weighted sequences.
...
PMID:Ovarian factor infertility. 1019 67
MRI
is the sole radiological examination to be obtained if abnormal menses, galactorrhea or
anovulation
evokes the diagnosis of prolactinoma. Nevertheless, iatrogenic hyperprolactinemia or presence of big prolactin has to be ruled out before
MRI
is asked for.
MRI
of the pituitary gland must be technically optimal; analysis of the images has to be directed by clinical and biological data.
...
PMID:[MRI of the pituitary gland: indications and results in gynaecology and in obstetrics]. 1584 87