Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0030794 (pelvic pain)
4,056 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The factors associated with 137 cases of IUD expulsion or early removal due to complications were investigated in a case-control study conducted at an Italian family planning clinic. The 454 controls were women who did not experience adverse IUD outcomes. Complications in the study group included: bleeding (35%), expulsion (13%), pregnancy (13%), pelvic pain (15%), and pelvic inflammatory disease (24%). The majority of complications occurred 6-12 months after IUD insertion. Previous IUD use and the type of IUD inserted were unrelated to outcome. Most significant in terms of outcome was parity. There was a statistically significant (p .001) difference between the percentage of nulliparae in the study group (34%) compared with the control group (17%). Although most of the nulliparae in the study group were under 20 years of age, age did not have a significant correlation with IUD outcome. Pelvic inflammatory disease was significantly more prevalent in women under 30 years of age, while excessive bleeding was more common in cases above this age.
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PMID:Failure in intrauterine contraception. Analysis of 137 cases of unfavourable outcome. 158 53

Pelvic inflammatory disease is one of the most serious complications of sexually transmitted diseases. It is a medical and public health problem of great magnitude, and adolescents are at greater risk for its development than any other age group. Its sequelae of infertility, ectopic pregnancy, chronic pelvic pain, and dyspareunia may have a devastating impact upon a teenager's life. The epidemiology, pathogenesis, clinical features, differential diagnosis, and management and prevention of this clinical syndrome are presented.
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PMID:Pelvic inflammatory disease in the adolescent. 277 92

Complications associated with postabortion insertion of the Delta T and Copper T 200 IUDs were compared in 195 women. All insertions were performed with an inserter. There were no reported incidents of inserter-related problems, pelvic pain, or other complications at insertion. At follow-up, intermenstrual spotting was the most frequently reported complaint, involving 14 women (18.2%) in the Delta T group and 7 women (9.5%) in the TCu group. 8 Delta T acceptors (10.4%) and 12 TCu acceptors (16.2%) experienced intermenstrual bleeding. Intermenstrual pain was reported by 7 (9.1%) Delta T users and 4 (5.4%) TCu users. Other primary bleeding and pain complaints included menorrhagia, reported by 9 (11.7%) Delta T users and 9 (12.2%) TCu users, and dysmenorrhea, reported by 5 (6.5%) Delta T users and 4 (5.4%) TCu users. Pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) confined to the uterus was diagnosed in 9 (11.7%) Delta T acceptors and 5 (6.8%) TCu acceptors. 7 women (9.1%) in the Delta T group and 8 women (10.8%) in the TCu group reported PID confined to the adnexa. 1 woman from each group had PID confined to the uterus and adnexa and 5 TCu users reported PID beyond the uterus and adnexa. Of the 36 women diagnosed with PID, 9 had their devices removed. There was 1 pregnancy in the Delta T group and 1 device from each group was expelled. There were 3 removals for pain and bleeding in the Delta T group and 4 removals for this reason in the TCu group. The 6-month continuation rate was 85.5 for the Delta T device and 82.2 for the TCu IUD. Given the high incidence of spotting, intermenstrual bleeding, and PID recorded in this sample, insertion of an IUD in the immediate postabortion period is not recommended.
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PMID:A comparison of the delta copper T and the copper T 200 in Bologna, Italy. 372 92

One hundred twelve females below the age of twenty years underwent laparoscopy at the Medical University of South Carolina over a ten-year period. Pelvic pain followed by primary amenorrhea was the major indication for the procedure. Eighty-nine percent of those with acute pain had identifiable pelvic pathology, whereas 27% of girls presenting with chronic pain had a normal laparoscopic examination. Pelvic inflammatory disease was the most common diagnosis. Ovarian cysts, pregnancy complications, and endometriosis were also found. Endometriosis was not found among black teenage clinic patients. The procedure appears to be a safe and useful diagnostic tool in this age group.
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PMID:Laparoscopy in children and adolescents. 623 18

A 29 year old woman who had used a Lippes Loop D for 4 years was examined for acute pelvic pain. The IUD was removed and tests determined the presence of endomyometritis and parametritis on the left side of the pelvis. The patient, who had a history of thromboembolic disease, developed thrombosis of the left leg in spite of anticoagulant prophylaxis. The patient later underwent an operation to effect sterilization by using rings, and on the left side of the pelvis varicosis of the left ligamentum infundibulopelvic and the parametritis were observed. After the operation, the patient developed, in spite of prophylaxis, a pulmonary embolism, which was successfully treated.
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PMID:[Parametritis caused by an IUD]. 721 89

Coincident with the epidemic of sexually transmitted diseases, the incidence of pelvic inflammatory disease has risen sharply in recent years. Pelvic inflammatory disease is a major direct cause of infertility; in addition, it leads to ectopic pregnancies and chronic inflammatory residua requiring surgical intervention. This threat to the future fertility of women is rendered more serious by the difficulty of making a correct diagnosis and the likelihood that faulty diagnosis will result in inadequate treatment. Pelvic inflammatory disease is caused not only by Neisseria gonorrhoeae but also by Chlamydia trachomatis, genital tract mycoplasmas, and mixed bacteria from the endogenous vaginal and cervical flora, especially anaerobes. Diagnostic criteria include (1) lower abdominal and pelvic pain, (2) lower abdominal tenderness, (3) elevation of erythrocyte sedimentation rate, (4) adnexal inflammatory mass, and (5) presence of leukocytes and bacteria in the peritoneal fluid. Early diagnosis and prompt treatment appear to be crucial in preventing infertility. No studies have evaluated prospectively the relative advantages of inpatient vs. outpatient management of acute pelvic inflammatory disease. The recommendations of the Centers for Disease Control (CDC; Atlanta, Ga.) for outpatient treatment and the results of a multi-hospital collaborative study using the CDC regimens are discussed. Criteria for hospitalization and parenteral antibiotic therapy are presented.
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PMID:Pelvic inflammatory disease: etiology, diagnosis, and treatment. 733 Jul 55

Between April 1988 and June 1991, health workers in Nigeria followed 300 women aged 20-40 who had had a copper releasing IUD inserted during menstruation at the family planning clinic of the University College Hospital in Ibadan. The double blind clinical trial compared the effectiveness and side effects of three copper releasing IUDs: Copper T380A, Multiload 375, and Multiload 250. 75.7% had used no contraception before admission to the study. Pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) occurred more often in the MLCU 250 group than the other two groups. Only two women were hospitalized for PID. These two women used the TCU 380A or MLCU 250. Many IUD users experienced abdominal pain during menstruation and TCU 380A users had the highest rate (27% vs. 21-24%). Heavy bleeding during menstruation was more common in TCU 380A and MLCU 375 users (5% and 4%, respectively, vs. 2%). Pelvic pain/cramps were present in 1-3% of women, but did not contribute to removal. The only case of uterine perforation was in a user of the TCU 380A. None of the MLCU 375 users experienced IUD expulsion, while two TCU 380A users experienced total expulsion and two and one MLCU 250 users experienced total and partial expulsion, respectively. PID was related to IUD removal at 6 months (3.1% vs. 0; p 0.05). The pregnancy rate at 6 months was 1.1% for the TCU 380A group and 0 for the other groups. At 12 months, it was 1.1% for the TCU 380A group and the MLCU 375 group and 0 for MLCU 250. The net 6-month IUD cumulative termination rate was highest in the TCU 380A group (11.1% vs. 3-7%; p 0.05). These differences were no longer significant at 12 months. The net 6- and 12-month IUD continuation rate was 97% and 92% for MLCU 375 compared to 88.9% for TCU 380A and 93% for MLCU 250 and 85.8% for TCU 380A and 87% for MLCU 250, respectively. These findings suggest that these three IUD devices could be used in the hospital's family planning clinic.
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PMID:Performances of copper T 380A and multiload copper 375/250 intrauterine contraceptive devices in a comparative clinical trial. 749 2

Pelvic inflammatory disease continues to take its physical, psychological, and financial tolls. Prompt treatment of symptomatic disease and screening of asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic women for the major causative organism--Chlamydia trachomatis--are the keys to preventing serious sequelae, such as chronic pelvic pain, ectopic pregnancy, and infertility.
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PMID:PID prevention: clinical and societal stakes. 814 16

Pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) is a common infection in women of reproductive age. PID is actually a spectrum of disease, beginning with cervicitis and progressing to endometritis and eventually salpingitis. Sequelae include ectopic pregnancy, infertility, chronic pelvic pain, hydrosalpinx, and tubo-ovarian abscess. Neisseria gonorrhoeae and Chlamydia trachomatis are the primary causes of PID. Chlamydial infection may be asymptomatic, and the resulting salpingitis is often referred to as "silent PID." Polymicrobial infection with other organisms (eg, anaerobes, facultative aerobes) may be initiated by gonorrhea, chlamydial infection, or both. Early recognition of infection, prompt institution of appropriate antibiotic therapy, and proper follow-up are important to prevent the sequelae of PID. Patient education is essential to reduce the incidence of PID.
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PMID:Pelvic inflammatory disease. Current diagnostic criteria and treatment guidelines. 843 60

25 patients have involved in this research, who have chronic gynecologic pelvic pain and each of them had normal gynecologic examination. Chronic pelvic pain has been found mostly between 30-39 years age group married, multipar females, associated with 44% dysmenorrhea, 36 p. cent dyspareunaie. Cultures and clinical examinations were all negative as a sign of infection. Experienced intra-abdominal operation or infection were causes of pelvic pain (48%), especially appendectomy has a prominent place (75%). Laparoscopic investigation showed: 16 p. cent adhesions, 28 p. cent chronic annexitis, 16 p. cent experienced pelvic inflammatory disease, 8 p. cent uterine leiomyoma, 4 p. cent each endometriosis, experienced parametritis and haemorrhagic lutein cysts. Instead of making group of lesions, we prefer to describe it, in numbers as infection importance coefficient (IIC), which is developed for this research. IIC 0-2 points presents insufficient organic causes, it does not represent the cause of pain. Non organic and non gynecologic reasons must be the cause of pain. Non organic and non gynecologic reasons must be investigated. IIC 3-5 points presents minor experienced intraabdominal infection. Secondary cases like myoma, ovarian cysts, chronic cervicitis should be considered first as reason. IIC 6 points and more presents direct organic deficiency suitable surgery is the treatment of choice of this group.
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PMID:[25 patients undergoing laparoscopy for pelvic pain]. 844 81


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