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)

Physicians at the University of Milan in Italy compared data on 29 endometrial patients who received 3.6 mg goserelin in a 28-day subcutaneous depot formulation for 6 months to treat nonmenstrual pelvic pain, dysmenorrhea, and pain during coitus (dyspareunia) with data on 28 other endometrial patients treated with a low-dose monophasic oral contraceptive (OC) (.02 mg ethinyl estradiol and 0.15 mg desogestrel) for 6 months. They followed the women for 6 months after treatment ended. The physicians wanted to determine the efficacy of goserelin, a gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) agonist, versus a low dose OC to relieve pelvic pain in patients with endometriosis and to compare pain recurrence after drug withdrawal. (GnRH agonists are current medical treatments for pelvic pain, but they have several side effects and are expensive; and therefore their use is restricted.) At the end of treatment, both goserelin and the low-dose OC significantly reduced dyspareunia (p .01), especially goserelin according to the linear analog scale (pain symptom score, 1.8 points lower). Both treatments improved nonmenstrual pain equally at the end of treatment (p .01). The low-dose OC reduced dysmenorrhea greatly at the end of treatment (p .01). The researchers could not evaluate dysmenorrhea in goserelin cases, since these patients experienced amenorrhea. The only persistent significant reduction at the end of follow-up occurred with dyspareunia in goserelin patients (p .05). In the other patients, pelvic pain returned to baseline levels 6 months after treatment ended. The severity of pelvic pain did not differ between groups 6 months after follow-up. These results suggested that low-dose OCs may be an effective alternative treatment for dysmenorrhea and nonmenstrual pelvic pain linked to endometriosis.
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PMID:A gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist versus a low-dose oral contraceptive for pelvic pain associated with endometriosis. 851 62