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Three patients with complete lumbar spondyloptosis and 8 patients with fourth-degree spondylolisthesis suffering from radicular signs and symptoms are reported. There were 8 female and 3 male patients in the study. A high incidence of neurogenic intermittent claudication was noted in this condition. Decompressive laminectomy and foraminectomy were performed on all patients followed by transabdominal console fusion. Length of follow-up varied from 3 to 17 years, with a mean value of 13.5 years, and results are reported. Radicular signs and symptoms had completely subsided in all cases. Nine of 11 patients are free from signs and symptoms and 2 suffer from residual pain, although less severe than before surgery. All 3 males fathered children after surgery, which is in contrast to the opinion that anterior lumbosacrial fusion is followed by infertility in males. Special attention was given to individuality of remodeling of the lumbosacral junction over the course of time. Solid fusion was obtained in 10 of the 11 patients, while the console fusion collapsed because of failure to follow instructions after surgery in 1 patient.
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PMID:The treatment of lumbar spondyloptosis or impending lumbar spondyloptosis accompanied by neurologic deficit and/or neurogenic intermittent claudication. 43 18

Twenty patients, mostly with severe endometriosis and infertility, were treated with danazol 600 mg daily for six months. Clinical investigation and laboratory tests were done monthly. During treatment most clinical findings and symptoms of endometriosis disappeared within 2 to 3 months, but rectocervical induration and rectocervical pain decreased more slowly. During the 10 months follow-up after discontinuation of danazol, dysmenorrhoea recurred most commonly of all symptoms, but not to the same degree as before treatment and the patients were mainly satisfied. Gonadotrophin and prolactin levels did not alter significantly during treatment. Serum oestradiol and progesterone values were low during the danazol course. Testosterone values increased because of cross-reaction with danazol metabolites in the testosterone assay. Serum transaminase, creatinine, haemoglobin and blood platelet concentrations increased on average, but the changes were reversible. Three conceptions occurred during the period of study.
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PMID:Effects of danazol in the treatment of severe endometriosis. 53 49

A multifactorial approach was used by the authors to analyze data from 119 women with endometriosis and infertility. Conservative surgical procedures afforded a mean pregnancy rate of 37.7 per cent for those women with significant disease. Only 6.7 per cent became pregnant when the proposed surgery was declined. There was an inverse relationship in severity of endometriotic involvement and pregnancy rate. The mean pregnancy rate among 17 patients with minimal disease for whom surgery was discouraged was 64.7 per cent; all pregnancies occurred within the first 2 years of follow-up. Relief of pelvic pain was dramatic, especially following presacral neurectomy. Laparoscopic selection of cases further reinforces the importance of grading severity of endometriosis prior to embarking on restorative surgery. Presacral neurectomy, despite reinforcement of pain relief, did not appear to contribute significantly to the occurrence of pregnancy.
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PMID:Pelvic endometriosis: infertility and pelvic pain. 60 6

One hundred and fifty-three patients with pelvic endometriosis met the study criteria of inferility, tissue diagnosis, treatment with conservative surgery, and adequate follow-up. The extent of disease was classified according to Acosta and and associates. Pregnancy rates were 10 to 100% in various subclassifications of patients; these pregnancy rates were related to the extent of disease and the existence of concurrent inferitility factors. One hundred and seventeen patients were followed up for three years. Reoperation in this group was carried out in 28 patients for recurrent pain and/or persistent infertility. Each patient had diagnostic laparoscopy preceding relaparotomy. The reoperation rate was 40.6% in those patients who remained infertile, whereas this rate was only 3.7% in those patients who conceived following initial operation. The incidence of conception after a second conservative procedure was 12%. However, an equal number of patients in this group required total abdominal hysterectomy as a third procedure for control of recurrent pain. Thus, repeat conservative surgery should play a secondary role in the treatment of patients with infertility and recurrent endometriosis.
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PMID:Reoperation after initial treatment of endometriosis with conservative surgery. 66 50

Surgery has a specific and realistic place in the management of endometriosis. In the presence of an ovarian mass, diagnosis to rule out neoplasm is mandatory. Therapeutic surgery is carried out for the relief of pain when there is known symptomatic endometriosis or to provide improved chances of a successful gestation when there is infertility. The use of hormones preoperatively has not been routine but seems to be logical when there is extensive and significant scarring. It would seem appropriate to attempt to preserve childbearing function in those patients who are young and desirous of this. In older patients or those in whom the childbearing is complete, it seems unwise to leave behind diseased tissue that can require a subsequent operation. Conservative surgical treatment for infertility related to endometriosis has about a 40 percent chance of successful pregnancy; such conservative treatment carries a 10 to 12 percent risk of subsequent reoperation. The rate of malignancy in endometriosis is low. Intestinal tract endometriosis is uncommon. Bowel preparation is recommended if bowel surgery is anticipated because of the endometriosis. Urinary tract endometriosis is even more uncommon with the exception of the extrinsic pressure and scarring secondary to extensive pelvic endometriosis. tsurgical treatment seems to be of more value than hormone therapy when other organs are involved.
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PMID:The role of surgery in the management of endometriosis. 112 35

The aim of the paper was to evaluate the anatomical state of uterine adnexa in women operated on due to mechanical infertility. Hydrotubation were previously applied in 31 women stemming from various centres in the country, while in 31 such a treatment was not performed at all. The mentioned groups of women were encumbered, to a similar degree, with a risk factor of infertility, except for the duration of sterility, which in those treated by hydrotubation lasted on the average 2 years longer. From 5 to 50 hydrotubations were carried out, most frequently in series of 5 procedures. It was reported by the women that 8 of them after hydrotubation experienced hypogastric pain persisting for some days, and in 6 there was acute adnexitis. Destructive changes in uterine adnexa, being estimated during the reconstructive operation, were decidedly more advanced in women treated by hydrotubation. That was expressed mainly by frequent appearance of lytic adhesions as well as by more advanced fibrosis of oviducts, particularly that of endosalpinx. Unchanged oviducts, after their release from adhesions, also appeared less frequently.
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PMID:[Effect of hydrotubation on the anatomical state of oviducts in women with mechanical infertility]. 130 60

Fifty-six patients presenting with infertility (17); bleeding, pain, and pressure symptoms (32); and pelvic mass (seven) associated with leiomyomas were managed with laparoscopic myomectomy. Twenty-four second-look procedures were performed to evaluate healing and adhesion formation. Operative time ranged between 45-443 minutes (mean 157), estimated blood loss varied from 10-400 mL (mean 75), and the mean length of hospital stay was 1 day. Traditional morcellation was used initially but was abandoned because of long operating time; vaginal or abdominal removal (depending on size) proved more satisfactory. Three patients developed subcutaneous emphysema and one had febrile morbidity due to upper respiratory tract infection. There were no other complications. In 24 second-look procedures, adhesions were present in 16 subjects (66%). Twelve of 17 in the infertility group conceived (71%); all 39 patients with other complaints experienced satisfactory relief. There were no reoperations. When myomectomy is indicated, the laparoscopic approach appears to offer an alternative to abdominal surgery in selected patients.
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PMID:Laparoscopic myomectomy. 140 34

Although there is increasing awareness of the short-term psychological and social adaptations to childhood sexual abuse, little is known about the long-term effects of such abuse, particularly its effect on subsequent medical utilization and the experience and reporting of physical symptoms. We re-analyzed data from a previous study of 100 women scheduled for diagnostic laparoscopy (50 for chronic pain, 50 for tubal ligation or infertility evaluation) who received structured, physician-administered psychiatric and sexual abuse interviews. Women were regrouped by severity of childhood sexual abuse, and we compared the groups with respect to lifetime psychiatric diagnoses and medically unexplained symptom patterns. Unadjusted odds ratios showed that risk for lifetime diagnoses of major depression, panic disorder, phobia, somatization disorder and drug abuse, and current diagnoses of major depression and somatoform pain disorder were significantly higher in the severely abused group compared with women with no abuse or less severe abuse. Logistic regression analysis demonstrated that number of somatization symptoms, lifetime panic disorder and drug dependence were predictive of a prior history of severe childhood sexual abuse. Psychiatric disorders and medical symptoms, particularly chronic pelvic pain, are common in women with histories of severe childhood sexual abuse. Clinicians should inquire about childhood sexual and physical abuse experiences in patients with multiple medical and psychiatric symptoms, particularly patients with chronic pelvic pain.
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PMID:Medical and psychiatric symptoms in women with childhood sexual abuse. 145 59

The use of varicocelectomy for the treatment of subfertility seems to be incontrovertible. However, there is a difference of opinion as to the proper surgical method of varicocele ablation. The inguinal and high retroperitoneal approaches are the most commonly accepted methods to date. However, significant postoperative morbidity is common and return to normal activity often is prolonged. Also, bilateral operations are being performed more commonly. These considerations have prompted many to search for alternative techniques. We developed a laparoscopic procedure that is as simple and effective as more traditional methods. In addition, it offers lower morbidity, allows for microscopic dissection with preservation of the spermatic artery and is amenable to bilateral ligation without a second incision. Ten patients 16 to 54 years old underwent laparoscopic ligation of the spermatic veins at the internal inguinal ring. The diagnosis was based on physical examination. Indications for the operation were infertility with a stress sperm pattern in 5 patients, testicular atrophy in 4 and scrotal pain in 1. Four patients underwent bilateral ligation. Preliminary followup showed resolution of the varicocele in all patients and disappearance of pain in the patient treated for this symptom. No morbidity related to this procedure has been encountered and all patients resumed normal activity within 2 days. We believe that this new method is a viable alternative for varicocelectomy.
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PMID:Laparoscopic varicocelectomy: preliminary report of a new technique. 153 Aug 71

Seventy-five consecutive patients undergoing laparoscopy for chronic pelvic pain and/or infertility were studied to test whether beta-endorphin concentrations in peripheral mononuclear cells differed according to the presence or absence of endometriosis. Endometriosis was diagnosed in 45 subjects (minimal in 24, mild in 11, moderate in four, and severe in six). Twenty-eight women (62%) with endometriosis and ten (33%) without the disease reported moderate or severe pelvic pain. beta-Endorphin levels were lower in the endometriosis group than in the controls (16.6 +/- 11.2 versus 21.9 +/- 10.5 pg/10(6) cells; P less than .01). This decrease was attributable to reduced beta-endorphin concentrations in the endometriosis patients with moderate or severe pain compared with symptomatic controls (15.5 +/- 10.0 versus 26.3 +/- 7.0 pg/10(6) cells; P less than .01). A significant difference was also found in relation to the cycle phase: The opioid concentration was reduced in the luteal phase in the endometriosis group compared with controls (14.4 +/- 8.4 versus 23.8 +/- 7.5 pg/10(6) cells; P less than .01), but no differences were demonstrated in the follicular and periovulatory phases. beta-Endorphin is capable of modulating the immune response and can be considered as a classical cytokine. Low beta-endorphin production during the luteal phase may have implications in the development and/or maintenance of endometriosis.
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PMID:Mononuclear cell beta-endorphin concentration in women with and without endometriosis. 156 59


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