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

The knowledge needed to formulate proper indications for hysterectomy include a thorough understanding of the physiology and pathology of the female reproductive organs, the clinical manifestations of pelvic disease, and normal and abnormal psycho/social/sexual development. This basic and thorough knowledge and understanding is the absolute foundation on which to base the practice of gynecologic surgery. After the right operation has been selected for operation, the right operation must be selected for the patient. The successful practice of gynecologic surgery also requires proper preparation of the patient for the operation, proper performance of the operation, and proper postoperative care. A competent gynecologist who has followed a patient for several years, has kept careful records of findings and treatment, and has the patient's full confidence is most likely able to make the most accurate judgment about the necessity for hysterectomy. Yet, in most circumstances a 2nd opinion should still be sought. Apprpriate indications for hysterectomy include benign uterine disease and/or symptoms -- dysfunctional uterine bleeding; uterine pain, bleeding, and enlargement; uterine descensus and prolaspe; uterine leiomyomas; septic abortions; and obstetric catastrophs. Other indications include benign diseases of the tubes and ovaries in which the uterus is not primarily involved -- pelvic inflammatory disease, pelvic endometriosis, and ectopic pregnancy -- and neoplastic disease, namely, cervical intraepithelial carcinoma (carcinoma in situ), early invasive cervical cancer, endometrial adenocarcinoma and sarcoma, trophoblastic disease, ovarian and fallopian tube neoplasms, and malignant disease of other adjacent organs. Miscellaneous and usual indications for hysterectomy include cervical problems such as servical stenosis with recurring pyometra following unsuccessful attempts to keep the cervix open, chronic pelvic pain, pelvic congestion syndrome, and surgical sterilization. A partial list of inappropriate indications for hysterectomy includes prophylaxis against uterine cancer, contraception in a gynecologically normal patient, management of the menopause, leukorrhea and chronic cervictis, primary dysmenorrhea and premenstrual tension, mild urinary incontinence, postmenopausal bleeding, abnormal vaginal/cervical cytology, and cervical dysplasia.
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PMID:Indications of hysterectomy. 733 47

Combined histological and bacteriological investigations of 800 specimens of nonpregnant endometrial curettings of 15 to 60 years age group of hill women of Darjeeling District were carried out for detection of tuberculous endometritis. The principal complaints were infertility (47.5 per cent), abnormal uterine bleeding (30.75 per cent), amenorrhoea (11.25 per cent), leucorrhoea (6.25 per cent), and miscellaneous conditions (pelvic pain and pyometra) (4.25 per cent) cases. By histological examination alone, only 10.9 per cent cases could be diagnosed while by combined study the incidence rate was 11.8 percent, an increase in the diagnostic acumen by more than 10.3 per cent. Bacteriological study was of greater value in doubtful cases where there was absence of tuberculous granuloma or epithelioid cell but presence of nonspecific inflammatory cells along with variable degree of necrosis of glandular epithelia. The incidence of M.tuberculosis was 97.7 percent while that of atypical mycobacteria was 2.3 per cent. Thus simultaneous use of culture and biopsy yielded better results. Our prevalence is a little higher than other reports from India. In cold weather at a high altitude, the tubercle bacilli survive longer in fomites which serve as important sources of infection in Darjeeling. Women of third decade are more frequently affected (43.2 per cent).
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PMID:Tuberculous endometritis in hills of Darjeeling: a clinicopathological and bacteriological study. 815 2

A 42-year-old woman with recurrent bilateral endometrial ovarian cystoma presented with fever and pelvic pain caused by a tubo-ovarian abscess (TOA), which was resistant to several varieties of intravenous and oral antibiotics for 2 weeks (Case 1). Computed tomography (CT)-guided diagnostic aspiration for a rapid enlarged right ovarian cystoma through a transabdominal route confirmed that it had developed into a TOA. Subsequent percutaneous abscess drainage (PAD) and irrigation for 3 days were successful. One-year follow-up revealed no recurrence of TOA. A 58-year-old woman with recurrent cervical cancer after external radiation therapy (RT) presented with fever, confusion and tremor caused by pyometra (Case 2). Since transvaginal drainage was impossible due to cervical os obstruction, the patient had undergone CT-guided transabdominal PAD and irrigation for a month. Thereafter, the clinical findings improved and a tracheloplasty was performed to prevent recurrence. CT-guided PAD may be a useful treatment option for gynecologic abscess as a diagnostic aspiration, a temporizing procedure until surgery, or an alternative surgery.
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PMID:Gynecologic abscess: CT-guided percutaneous drainage. 1699 96

Pyometra is a pus accumulation in the endometrium cavity, with an incidence from 0.02% to 1.5%. The benign senile pyometra is a disease mainly reported in elder women, with an average age of 74 years. We present the case of a 59-year-old woman with the diagnosis of benign senile pyometra. The patient came to our service presenting purulent vaginal discharge, in bad condition with pelvic pain and altered hematic cytology. In the physical examination a pelvic mass was found, in the vaginal examination, the cervix was found estenotic, and the hysterometer could not be introduced. The image studies revealed an increased size of the uterus was liquid collection in its interior, compatible with blood or pus. We performed exploratory laparotomy, founding two abscecess in the uterin fundus which suffered rupture during the procedure. Abdominal hysterectomy with bilateral salpigooforectomy was performed, there were not other complications. Post surgical period was managed with antibiotics and close surveillance. The patient was discharged four days later with good response to the treatment. In the anatomophatological study no evidence of cervical or endometrial neoplasia was found.
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PMID:[Benign senile pyometra: case report]. 1879 23

Papillary carcinoma of the uterine cervix with features reminiscent of Transitional Cell Carcinoma (TCC) of urothelial origin, is a poorly recognized subtype of cervical carcinoma. This tumour has a propensity for late metastasis and local recurrence, in spite of the fact that histologically it could be misinterpreted as CIN grade III with a papillary configuration or as a squamous cell papilloma. This tumour occurs mainly in post-menopausal females, it is potentially aggressive and it presents at a more advanced stage. Here, we are presenting a case of a 65-year-old female who presented with post-menopausal bleeding and pelvic pain, and underwent hysterectomy for pyometra. The cervix showed a focus of papillary transitional carcinoma.
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PMID:Transitional cell carcinoma: a case report with clinical, histological and cytological findings. 2455 87