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Query: UMLS:C0030794 (pelvic pain)
4,056 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In the emergency room setting, multidetector detector CT (MDCT) offers rapid, noninvasive, multiplanar evaluation of female patients who have acute pelvic pain. MDCT has been integrated into several of the major trauma centers, and its use may surpass the use of ultrasound in the trauma evaluation of the pregnant patient. In the nonemergent setting, MDCT can be used to stage gynecologic malignancy and to evaluate tumor recurrence. Multiplanar MDCT has received some acceptance for evaluation of small primary tumor volume and small metastatic implants. MDCT also has a role in the evaluation of pelvic varices and suspected pelvic congestion syndrome.
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PMID:Multidetector CT of the female pelvis. 1625 64

Liposarcoma of uterus is a very rare neoplasm encountered generally in the sixth or seventh decade of life. We reported the eighth case of uterine liposarcoma with extension to broad ligament in a 23-year-old woman who presented with pelvic pain, dysuria, and rapidly enlarging pelvic mass. During laparotomy, the mass was detected to be originated from the uterine cervix. In frozen section, no definitive diagnosis was established, and for preservation of fertility, extirpation of the mass was performed. The histopathologic examination of the specimen revealed liposarcoma. The tumor cells were diffusely and intensively immune reactive for vimentin and S-100, and negative for smooth muscle actin, desmin, h-caldesmon, pan cytokeratin, and CD10. Staining with periodic acid and Schiff, alcian blue, mucicarmine, and epithelial membrane antigen (EMA) were negative. No recurrence was detected in the postoperative seventh month. Present case is the youngest patient with uterine liposarcoma and also the first case detected in reproductive period.
Int J Gynecol Cancer
PMID:Uterine liposarcoma in a young woman: a case report. 1634 21

The management of rectal cancer has been revolutionised over the last 20 years through improvements in staging, surgery and the use of radiotherapy and combination chemoradiotherapy. The traditional approach involved surgery followed by pathological assessment of the specimen reporting the completeness of excision. Incomplete excision in many cases led to local recurrence of the cancer within the pelvis with the disabling symptoms of pelvic pain, bowel fistulation and bowel and bladder dysfunction. Indeed, many patients died with local recurrence alone and salvage therapy in these patients was rarely successful. However, the recognition of the advantage of pre-operative therapy for patients in whom surgery would not provide local cure has been a major advance. The ability to downstage/downsize the tumour before curative surgery has improved outcome. However, these pre-operative therapies are toxic and not without their own complications, therefore the select use, targeted at the appropriate patient, represents the 'gold-standard'. The development of magnetic resonance imaging staging that accurately predicts operability has completed this triad approach which is focused through the weekly multidisciplinary team meeting. National acceptance of these techniques and standards can only improve the outcome for patients with this disease.
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PMID:Bowel cancer: the outcome is improving. 1635 55

It is well known that peritoneal tuberculosis may mimic advanced-stage epithelial ovarian carcinoma because of similar clinical, radiologic, and laboratory findings. However, disseminated peritoneal tuberculosis mimicking advanced-stage endodermal sinus tumor (ESS) has not been reported previously. An 18-year-old nulliparous woman came with the complaint of pelvic pain and weight loss. Imaging studies demonstrated that she had multiple peritoneal implants and left adnexial mass. Also, laboratory studies showed elevated CA125 and alpha fetoprotein levels suggesting an initial diagnosis of ESS. However, intraoperative frozen section examination showed caseous necrosis, and she was diagnosed as having disseminated peritoneal tuberculosis. Two months after the initial exploration, the patient required liver transplantation because of hepatic failure due to widespread hepatic involvement of the tuberculosis. Concomitant peritoneal and hepatic involvement of tuberculosis may cause false elevation of multiple tumor markers of gynecological cancers and may lead to misdiagnosis and mismanagement of patients. Elevation of these markers should be carefully investigated especially in premenopausal women. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of peritoneal tuberculosis misdiagnosed as endodermal sinus tumor.
Int J Gynecol Cancer
PMID:Disseminated peritoneal tuberculosis mimicking advanced-stage endodermal sinus tumor: a case report. 1651 9

This is the unique report of a patient with deep-seated, left-sided pelvic pain following a large-loop excision of the transformation zone (LLETZ) for cervical intraepithelial neoplasia III. She transpired to have a definite diagnosis of pelvic varicosities which were only on the left side. Our surmise was that the varicosities had risen on the back of an arteriovenous malformation following her LLETZ performed by a colleague. The first attempted treatment was radiologic embolization. When this failed, she had a formal surgical procedure, and the left unilateral varicosities were ligated. Her pain ceased entirely thereafter, and she remained pain free at her 1-year review.
Int J Gynecol Cancer
PMID:Chronic pelvic pain: a rare complication following a large-loop excision of the transformation zone. 1668 36

This report describes a rare case of high-grade endometrial stromal sarcoma (ESS) arising from pathologically confirmed endometriosis in the cul-de-sac. A 37-year-old woman presented with irregular menstruation, pelvic pain, and diarrhea. Magnetic resonance imaging and colon biopsy suggested endometriotic nodule of the cul-de-sac. The tumor size was reduced with hormonal therapy, and the residual tumor was excised, resulting in the pathologic diagnosis of endometriosis. Two years later, a soft mass reappeared with rapid growth. Tumor extraction was performed, and the histopathologic diagnosis was high-grade ESS. Neither hormonal therapy nor chemotherapy was effective, and the patient died 6 months postoperatively. ESS should be included in the differential diagnosis of malignant transformation of endometriosis.
Int J Gynecol Cancer
PMID:A case of high-grade endometrial stromal sarcoma arising from endometriosis in the cul-de-sac. 1668 80

Hysterectomy is performed for a wide range of benign and malignant conditions, such as fibroids, menorrhagia and pelvic pain, and gynaecological malignancies. One in four women has a chance of undergoing hysterectomy in her lifetime. Conventionally abdominal hysterectomy is done through the open approach. However, many patients assume that the modern laparoscopic hysterectomy is superior to the standard approach. Laparoscopic surgical centres are mushrooming in major cities. This article presents ethical considerations involved in the decision-making process of choosing from the surgical options available.
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PMID:Ethical issues in laparoscopic hysterectomy. 1683 25

Uterine leiomyosarcoma is a rare malignancy whose presenting symptoms usually are not specific for the disease. The clinical presentations include vaginal bleeding, pelvic pain or pressure, and awareness of an abdominal-pelvic mass. The diagnosis should be considered if rapid uterine enlargement occurs, especially in a post-menopausal woman. Local spreading of the tumor could involve the myometrium, pelvic blood vessels and lymphatics, contiguous pelvic structures, and then the abdominal organs, whereas distant metastasis most often involve the lungs. A 63-year-old female presented a rare uterine leiomyosarcoma metastasis to the skull with the manifestions of a bulging mass over her left occipito-parietal region. On admission, neurological examination revealed right hemiplegia. She underwent total resection of the tumor with the reconstruction of the dura, the skull plate and the scalp. Her post-operative course was smooth and the muscle power of her right limbs was improved from grade 1 to grade 3 after the procedure. The histological diagnosis is leiomyosarcoma. Aggressive management of the metastatic skull tumor is recommended in selected patients at least for a betterquality of life.
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PMID:Skull metastasis from uterine leiomyosarcoma: a case report. 1687 98

Increasing number of uterine malignancies have been reported in breast cancer patients using tamoxifen. Most of these are endometrial adenocarcinomas. However, only a few cases of endometrial stromal sarcomas have been reported to be linked with tamoxifen usage. A 58-year-old postmenopausal women who had been using tamoxifen for 4 years after a surgery for breast cancer is presented with chronic pelvic pain. Preoperative investigations were indicative of a uterine myoma so that a standard total abdominal hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy were performed. Postoperative histologic diagnosis was a uterine tumor resembling ovarian sex cord tumors, which is an exceedingly rare entity itself. The present case is the first designated diagnosis of this rare tumor, with a possible association of tamoxifen usage.
Int J Gynecol Cancer
PMID:Uterine tumor resembling ovarian sex cord tumors in a patient using tamoxifen: report of a case and review of literature. 1688 88

This chapter summarizes the diagnostic performance (sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative likelihood ratios) of ultrasound, computer tomography, and magnetic resonance imaging in the diagnosis of various gynecological diseases and tumors. Positron emission tomography is not discussed. Imaging in infertility, in the diagnosis of Mullerian duct anomalies and in gynecological oncology (staging of gynecological cancers, diagnosis of recurrence of gynecological cancer, diagnosis of trophoblastic tumors) is not dealt with. Ultrasound is the first-line imaging method for discrimination between viable intrauterine pregnancy, miscarriage and tubal pregnancy in women with bleeding and/or pain in early pregnancy, for discrimination between benign and malignant adnexal masses and for making a specific diagnosis in adnexal tumors (e.g. dermoid cyst, endometrioma, hemorrhagic corpus luteum, etc.), for diagnosing intracavitary uterine pathology in women with bleeding problems, and for confirming or refuting pelvic pathology in women with pelvic pain. Magnetic resonance imaging can have a role as a secondary test in the diagnosis of adenomyosis, 'deep endometriosis' (e.g. endometriosis in the rectovaginal septum or in the uterosacral ligaments), and in the diagnosis of extremely rare types of ectopic pregnancy (e.g. in the spleen, liver or retroperitoneum).
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PMID:Imaging in gynecology. 1690 42


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