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Query: UMLS:C0030794 (
pelvic pain
)
4,056
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Advances in technology and improved availability have led to increased use of computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to evaluate women presenting to the emergency department or to their primary care provider with abdominal and/or
pelvic pain
. Computed tomographic examinations are often performed to evaluate the presence of appendicitis or renal stone disease. However, gynecologic abnormalities are frequently identified on these examinations. Although ultrasound remains the primary modality by which complaints specific to the pelvis are evaluated, in many instances, CT and MRI imaging occurs before sonographic evaluation.Historically, because of cost, radiation exposure, and relative ease of use, ultrasound examinations have preceded all other imaging modalities when evaluating pelvic disorders. However, as CT and MRI technology have improved, their use in diagnosing causes of
pelvic pain
has become equal to that of ultrasound. In some cases, primarily because of historic comfort with sonographic evaluation, gynecologic abnormalities originally diagnosed on CT or MRI may be immediately and unnecessarily reevaluated by ultrasound. For a woman in her reproductive years, the most common adnexal masses are physiological cysts, endometriomas, and cystic teratomas. Although lesions are often asymptomatic and incidentally detected, they can present with pain, and they increase the risk of ovarian torsion. Common causes of chronic
pelvic pain
in this population include leiomyomata and adenomyosis. In postmenopausal women, ovarian carcinoma, which often does not present clinically until a late stage, has to be included in the differential diagnosis of adnexal masses. If a gynecologic pathology is discovered on CT or MRI, an immediate follow-up ultrasound need not be pursued if the lesion can be characterized as benign, needing immediate surgical intervention, or a variant of normal anatomy. If, on the other hand, findings demonstrate a mass that either is uncharacteristic of a benign lesion, has an indeterminate risk for
malignancy
, or demonstrates suspicious characteristics for
malignancy
(such as enhancing mural nodules), further evaluation by serial ultrasound, biochemical marker, and/or CT or MRI is warranted. The purpose of this review is to present a series of commonly encountered gynecologic abnormalities with either CT or MR to make radiologists more familiar with gynecologic pathology on CT and MRI.
...
PMID:Computed tomographic and magnetic resonance features of gynecologic abnormalities in women presenting with acute or chronic abdominal pain. 1780 65
Endometriosis is the presence of endometrial cells and stroma at ectopic sites outside the uterine cavity. The natural history of endometriosis is uncertain, its etiology unknown, the clinical presentation inconsistent, diagnosis difficult and the treatment poorly standardized. It causes significant morbidity due to
pelvic pain
and infertility among 15-25% of women during their reproductive age. The benign disease causes peritoneal inflammation, fibrosis, adhesions and ovarian cysts but displays features of
malignancy
, like neo-vascularization, local invasion and distant metastasis. Mechanical, hormonal, immunological, environmental and genetic factors have been implicated in its etiology but provide inconclusive explanations. Present study was carried out on ectopic and eutopic endometriotic tissue specimens collected during laproscopy/laprotomy from cases of endometriosis. mRNA was isolated from the tissues and converted to cDNA by RT and subsequently subjected to differential display Polymerase Chain Reaction using seven sets of arbitrary primers. A unique band was identified only in the ectopic endometriotic tissue, which was sequenced. BLAST search results revealed sequence homology to shigella bacterial DNA leading us to hypothesize that infection may be playing a role in the etiology of endometriosis. This is the first report implicating the role of bacterial infection in the etiology of endometriosis. Shigella is known to invade the mucosa of the colon through the feco-oral route causing Shigellosis. The pathogenesis of shigellosis involves inflammation, ulceration, haemorrhage, tissue destruction and fibrosis of the colonic mucosa resulting in abdominal pain and diarrhoea/dysentery, this is similar to the pathogenesis of endometriosis which also involves inflammation, haemorrhage, tissue destruction and fibrotic adhesions of the pelvic peritoneum resulting in abdominal pain and infertility. The non-motile shigella bacteria invade the deeper mucosal layers by travelling from cell to cell of colonic epithelium, reaching the lamina propria of the colonic mucosa. We propose that, by the same mechanism, the bacteria travel across the colon wall to reach the outer peritoneal surface of the colon, which is in close proximity to the posterior uterine surface in the Pouch of Douglas, the site which incidentally happens to be the commonest site of early endometriosis. Our hypothesis therefore proposes that shigella or shigella-like organisms may be the trigger for the initiation of immunological changes in the pelvic peritoneum causing endometriosis. Once the endometrial cells are implanted at ectopic sites they are sustained by hormones and angiogenic factors. Hence "Infection hypothesis" provides a novel explanation for the etiopathogenesis of endometriosis.
...
PMID:Role of Shigella infection in endometriosis: a novel hypothesis. 1788 83
We present a case of a 36-year-old Caucasian woman with ascites, elevated CA-125, an enlarged left ovary and chronic
pelvic pain
who underwent an unnecessary surgical intervention because of suspected malignant disease. During the operation ovarian and sigmoid colon granulomatous tumors caused by Enterobius vermicularis infestation were revealed. In this case, the presence of Enterobius vermicularis ova in the abdominal cavity appears to have caused a sufficient reaction to produce symptoms and signs of
malignancy
leading to surgical intervention. Moreover, awareness that such lesions may occur is important since the lesions and clinical signs may be misinterpreted as being malignant with subsequent unnecessary surgical intervention.
...
PMID:Ascites, high CA-125 and chronic pelvic pain in an unusual clinical manifestation of Enterobius vermicularis ovarian and sigmoid colon granuloma. 1817 51
Elevated levels of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) in men may result from a variety of causes, such as prostate cancer, benign prostatic hyperplasia, acute urinary tract infection, and bacterial prostatitis. In recent years, several studies have also demonstrated a relationship between chronic prostatitis/chronic
pelvic pain
syndrome and increased PSA levels. However, asymptomatic patients are not routinely screened for this diagnosis before transrectal biopsy is performed to rule out prostate cancer. These asymptomatic men with elevated PSA levels frequently have evidence of inflammation when their expressed prostatic secretions are examined, or on their prostate biopsy specimens. This raises the problem of appropriate evaluation in the presence of chronic prostatitis and elevated PSA levels--not only in prostate cancer screening programmes, but also in
cancer
-negative biopsy findings. Evidence from the literature indicates that antimicrobial treatment may lower the PSA levels to what is considered the normal range. Despite that, general recommendations for the practical management are lacking and undetected prostate cancer in men with chronic prostatitis remains a difficult issue.
...
PMID:The issue of prostate cancer evaluation in men with elevated prostate-specific antigen and chronic prostatitis. 1833 65
The role of imaging in obstetrics and gynecology has undergone a revolution over the past few decades. Well-established methods such as endovaginal ultrasound have had a central role in the evaluation of nongravid patients with
pelvic pain
, as well as in the workup for ectopic pregnancy and evaluation of adnexal masses. Additional tools include MRI in the evaluation of appendicitis and other potentially surgical conditions in pregnant patients and MRI and CT in the evaluation of surgical complications. Newer tools in the radiology armamentarium include PET scanning which, alongside MRI and CT, are often helpful in staging gynecologic
malignancy
. The role of imaging in the obstetric and gynecology patient will continue to change as new modalities and techniques are introduced.
...
PMID:CT, MRI, PET, PET/CT, and ultrasound in the evaluation of obstetric and gynecologic patients. 1838 Nov 18
The fibrinolytic system includes a broad spectrum of proteolytic enzymes with physiological and pathophysiological functions in several processes, such as haemostatic balance, tissue remodeling, tumor invasion, angiogenesis and reproduction. The main enzyme of the plasminogen activator system is plasmin, which is responsible for the degradation of fibrin into soluble degradation products. The activation of plasminogen into plasmin is mediated by two types of activators, urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) and tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA). The activity of both is regulated by specific plasminogen activator inhibitors (PAIs). There are 3 types of PAIs described so far but the most important fibrinolytic inhibitor in vivo is PAI type 1 (PAI-1). Among others, the presence of metabolic syndrome and the -675 4G/5G promoter polymorphism are known to be modulators of PAI-1 levels. Besides their fibrinolytic profile, plasmin and plasminogen activators are implicated in tissue proliferation and cellular adhesion, as they can proteolytically degrade the extracellular matrix and regulate the activation of both growth factors and matrix metalloproteinases. By all these means, the fibrinolytic system is also involved in physiological processes, and in pathological situations such as thrombosis, arteriosclerosis, endometriosis and
cancer
. PAI 1 has been studied in different settings with thrombotic pathophysiology, such as coronary artery disease and ischaemic stroke. Controversial results have been published and concerns about study designs or presence of confounders have been claimed to be responsible of them. Recently, its involvement in adverse thrombotic events related to the modern drug-eluting coronary stents has renewed the interest of its study. PAI-1 also plays an important role in signal transduction, cell adherence, and migration. Indeed, studies of several types of cancers, including breast cancer, have shown that increased uPA and PAI-1 levels are associated with aggressive tumor behavior and poor prognosis. Endometriosis is defined by the presence of endometrial glands and stroma outside the uterus with marked ability to attach and invade the peritoneum. It is one of the most frequent benign gynecological diseases that affect women with
pelvic pain
or infertility during their reproductive age. Immune system disorders, genetic predisposition, altered peritoneal environment and endometrial alterations are believed to increase the susceptibility to endometriosis. The plasminogen activator system may be involved in this process, where local extracellular proteolysis plays a crucial role. Altered expression of several components of the fibrinolytic system in both eutopic and ectopic endometrium and peritoneal fluid of women with the disease has been implicated not only in the onset, but also in the progression of the endometriotic lesions.
...
PMID:Fibrinolysis: the key to new pathogenetic mechanisms. 1847
Advances in imaging techniques over the past few decades have continued at an astounding pace and now physicians have various modalities to examine the human body. These imaging techniques may be used to assist in diagnosis, staging, and follow-up of oncology patients. The increasing complexity of diagnostic radiology provides a challenge to radiologists and oncologists to use these tools in a clinically efficient and cost-effective manner. The ultimate goal is to offer a safe and effective examination that provides clinically relevant information for the management of an individual patient. Currently ultrasound (US), computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and positron emission tomography (PET) are being used to evaluate patients with gynecological
malignancies
. Goal of this review is to provide an overview of clinically available imaging techniques and discuss relative strengths and weaknesses. This article summarizes the diagnostic performance (sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative likelihood ratios) of US, CT, MRI and PET/CT in the diagnosis of various gynecological diseases and tumors. US is the first-line imaging modality of choice and is used to discriminate between benign and malignant adnexal masses and for characterizing adnexal tumors such as dermoid cyst, endometrioma, hemorrhagic corpus luteum, etc., for diagnosing intrauterine pathology in women with dysfunctional uterine bleeding, and for confirming or refuting pelvic pathology in women with
pelvic pain
. MRI can play a role in detecting the extent of disease and helps in local staging of gynecologic tumors. CT can be used to detect extrapelvic disease and PET/CT can assist in detecting distant metastatic disease in order to select appropriate surgical candidates.
...
PMID:Diagnostic imaging in gynecologic malignancy. 1848 65
Endometriotic foci, especially ovarian ones, with epithelial cytologic atypia may be precursors of
cancer
. This study presents an overview of the atypical cytological and histopathological findings associated with endometriosis. Six cases of endometriosis, with atypical histological and cytological changes, were obtained from the archives of the Department of Pathology at Cleveland Clinic Foundation between year 2000 and 2003. The size of the base from which these cases were drawn was 2000 cases of endometriosis. The age range of the patients was from 29 to 52 years. The clinical presentations included infertility (three cases),
pelvic pain
(three cases), adenexal and pelvic masses (four cases). Stage IV endometriosis with extensive pelvic involvement was found in two patients. Intraoperatively, the endometriotic lesions involved the ovaries (all cases); Cul de sac (four cases); urinary bladder (two cases); sigmoid colon, hemidiaphragms, and uterine vessels (one case each). The endometriotic lesions were associated with uterine leiomyomas (two patients) and adenocarcinoma of the vagina (one patient). Histologically, in addition to endometrial type glands and stroma, usually found in endometriosis, we observed both cytologic and pattern atypism involving the epithelium in all cases. The features of cytologic atypia included nuclear stratification, hyperchromatism, and pleomorphism. The features of pattern atypia were complex glandular pattern, papillary formations and psammoma bodies. In two cases, these features were sufficient for diagnosis of borderline Mullerian seromucinous tumours. One patient had recurred with metastatic adenocarcinoma of the vault. She died later from disseminated metastatic disease. There is a rare association between pelvic endometriosis and borderline ovarian tumours (three cases), cytologic and pattern atypia (two cases); mesothelial hyperplasia, endosalpingiosis (two cases), and metastasis (one case). Cytologic and pattern atypia can develop in the endometriotic foci and therefore, these lesions should be thoroughly scrutinized for presence of these changes. Our findings recommend surgical excision of these foci rather than their simple cauterization.
...
PMID:Pelvic endometriosis is rarely associated with ovarian borderline tumours, cytologic and architectural atypia: a clinicopathologic study. 1857 28
The etiology of chronic
pelvic pain
in women is poorly understood. Although a specific diagnosis is not found in the majority of cases, some common diagnoses include endometriosis, adhesions, irritable bowel syndrome, and interstitial cystitis. The initial history and physical examination can narrow the diagnostic possibilities, guide any subsequent evaluation, and rule out
malignancy
or significant systemic disease. If the initial evaluation does not reveal a specific diagnosis, a limited laboratory and ultrasound evaluation can clarify the diagnosis, as well as rule out serious disease and reassure the patient. Few treatment modalities have demonstrated benefit for the symptoms of chronic
pelvic pain
. The evidence supports the use of oral medroxyprogesterone, goserelin, adhesiolysis for severe adhesions, and a multidisciplinary treatment approach for patients without a specific diagnosis. Less supporting evidence is available for oral analgesics, combined oral contraceptive pills, gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonists, intramuscular medroxyprogesterone, trigger point and botulinum A toxin injections, neuromodulative therapies, and hysterectomy.
...
PMID:Chronic pelvic pain in women. 1858 34
Ovarian cancers are the most lethal gynecologic
malignancies
and are rarely diagnosed in their early stages. The most common of these tumors--serous papillary carcinoma--is generally asymptomatic in the early stages. Non serous carcinomas (endometrioid and clear-cell carcinomas) have a higher chance of early diagnosis, as the associated endometriosis can cause
pelvic pain
, while endometrial hyperplasia/neoplasia can lead to vaginal bleeding. In addition, serous papillary carcinomas tend to be bilateral with peritoneal involvement, while non serous papillary carcinomas are often unilateral. Non serous papillary carcinomas tend to occur in younger, hyperestrogenic, often infertile patients. Serous papillary carcinomas potentially arise from dysplastic epithelial cells lining the ovarian surface and inclusion cysts, while the substrate of non serous papillary tumors is atypical endometriotic tissue. Tumor markers also tend to differ between the two forms of ovarian cancer. Pelvic laparoscopy and prophylactic oophorectomy have offered new insights into the mechanisms and early stages of ovarian
malignancies
.
...
PMID:[Stage I ovarian carcinoma: two distinct malignancies?]. 1866 67
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