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Query: UMLS:C0030794 (
pelvic pain
)
4,056
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The approach to the patient with CPP with a history of
PID
remains a diagnostic challenge even for the experienced clinician. From the initial diagnosis of presumed
PID
to managing the pain that may result, using an approach that looks at all factors, not just antecedent
PID
, allows the practicing physician to avoid becoming too narrowly focused in his or her approach. A clinical starting point would assume all possibilities for
pelvic pain
and evaluate for each. Given the history of one or more episodes of
PID
, especially if documented with a prior laparoscopy, earlier investigation for adhesions could be justified in selected patients. If the pelvic examination further suggests a pelvic source, a laparoscopy performed early rather than late in the work-up would seem appropriate. The key to management of the patients who have CPP following
PID
is to use any and all available diagnostic and therapeutic modalities to identify the source(s) before assuming that the patient suffers only from the known sequelae of
PID
.
...
PMID:Relationship of pelvic infection and chronic pelvic pain. 811 85
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.
...
PMID:PID prevention: clinical and societal stakes. 814 16
Forty-nine laparoscopic findings of women with chronic
pelvic pain
and dysmenorrhea, were reviewed. In all of them a laparoscopy was performed under general anesthesia. Endometriosis was found as principal cause of the pain, followed by chronic
pelvic inflammatory disease
and adhesions. In 10.2% of the patients the pelvis was normal. We can conclude that in the patient with chronic
pelvic pain
, laparoscopy is a useful method to achieve the correct diagnosis to prescribe the most accurate treatment.
...
PMID:[The laparoscopic findings in patients with chronic pelvic pain and dysmenorrhea]. 816 24
Published studies relating to the usefulness of diagnostic and operative laparoscopy in women with chronic
pelvic pain
(CPP) were reviewed. This revealed that approximately 40 per cent of all laparoscopies were done for CPP. However, the definition of CPP was found to be nebulous and inconsistent, and that muddled definitive conclusions about patient diagnoses and treatments. The following definition of CPP was proposed: nonmenstrual pain of 3 or more months duration that localizes to the anatomic pelvis and is severe enough to cause functional disability and require medical or surgical treatment. A survey of published reports showed laparoscopically diagnosable abnormalities in 61 per cent of patients, compared with abnormalities in 28 per cent of women without CPP. Studies in adolescents were also reviewed and showed that adolescents with CPP also had significant laparoscopically diagnosed abnormalities, with 78 per cent showing some pathology, especially endometriosis (40 per cent). Endometriosis, pelvic adhesions, chronic
pelvic inflammatory disease
, and ovarian cysts were the diagnoses most commonly made via laparoscopy in CPP patients. The potential roles of each of these abnormalities in CPP were discussed, as well as the results of laparoscopic treatment of each disease. Laparoscopy was also found to have a limited role in women with CPP after hysterectomy or bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy, with usefulness in diagnosing and treating adhesions and residual ovary syndrome, although its role in ovarian remnant syndrome was uncertain. Overall, the data showed that less than 50 per cent of women with CPP were helped by diagnostic and operative laparoscopy, stressing the need for both physicians and patients to recognize that laparoscopy is neither the ultimate evaluation nor the panacea for CPP.
...
PMID:The role of laparoscopy in chronic pelvic pain: promise and pitfalls. 832 35
The authors analyse the results of direct (cervical, urethral, tubal) and serological research of Chlamydia trachomatis in a sample population of 420 women undergoing celioscopy due to sterility and
pelvic pain
, paying particular attention to a group of 193 who were found to be suffering from
PID
(acute, sequelae). In terms of absolute numbers the correlation between chlamydial contact-
PID
-sterility is confirmed, whereas in an analysis of the levels of direct positivity it is only significant for acute
PID
, and in cases of sequelae and in sterility with chronic infection with or without tubal damage the direct identification of Chlamydia trachomatis does not differ much from controls. Salpingo-peritoneal isolation was found to be completely lacking in significance.
...
PMID:[Chlamydia trachomatis, pelvic inflammatory diseases and sterility]. 833 83
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
.
...
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.
...
PMID:[25 patients undergoing laparoscopy for pelvic pain]. 844 81
In the mid-1980s in Brazil, health workers randomly assigned 1711 women aged 15-48 requesting IUD insertion at the Center for Research on Integrated Maternal and Child Care clinic in Rio de Janeiro to have the Copper-T 200 IUD inserted by a physician or by a nurse. The study aimed to determine whether trained nurses could perform as safe and effective IUD insertions as physicians. Insertion failure was more common when performed by nurses than physicians (3.3% vs. 1.3%; p = 0.005). Severe pain at insertion was more common during physician insertions than nurse insertions (10.8% vs. 7.1%; p = 0.008) and in women who had menstrual bleeding, bleeding, dysmenorrhea, or
pelvic pain
than in women lacking these preinsertion symptoms (14.2% vs. 7.8%; p 0.001). History of
pelvic inflammatory disease
(
PID
) or a sexually transmitted disease (STD) increased the likelihood of severe pain at insertion (14.5% vs. 8.5%; p = 0.022). Nulliparous women were more likely to experience insertion failure than parous women regardless of provider, especially for nurse insertions (11.6% vs. 1.6%; p 0.01). The higher failure rate among nurses was probably due to a higher proportion of nulliparous women in the nurse insertion group (17.2% vs. 13.6%; p 0.05). The overall IUD use-effectiveness rate at 12 months was 98.8% (98.6% for physicians and 99% for nurses). The cumulative IUD continuation rate at 12 months was slightly better for nurse insertions than for physician insertions (75.2% vs. 74.4%). There were no significant differences between termination rates regardless of reason (pregnancy, expulsion, or removal) between physicians and nurses. The increases in complaint rates between preinsertion and postinsertion were the same for both physicians and nurses (25.8% and 25.1%, respectively). These results indicate the need to emphasize taking the client's medical history and diagnosing existing medical symptoms that are possibly linked to IUD insertion complications. Physicians or more experienced nurses should insert an IUD in nulliparous women. More counseling and care are needed for women with IUD insertion complications and those with a history of
PID
or STD.
...
PMID:Comparative study of safety and efficacy of IUD insertions by physicians and nursing personnel in Brazil. 852 Jun 6
Induced abortion is one of the most frequent surgical procedures in the UK. Even though it is considered safe, it sometimes has complications and long-term sequelae.
Pelvic inflammatory disease (PID)
is the most prevalent complication and can lead to chronic
pelvic pain
, pain during intercourse, infertility, and a higher risk of ectopic pregnancy. Chlamydia trachomatis is perhaps the leading etiologic agent for
PID
among women who have undergone induced abortion and who develop
PID
. Gonorrhea is another major etiologic agent for
PID
. Strategies used to try to reduce pelvic infection revolve around administration of antibiotic prophylaxis based on demographic features and on the presence of certain organisms in the genital tract that may increase their risk (e.g., C. trachomatis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae) and universal antibiotic prophylaxis for all women undergoing abortion. Most of the literature suggests that antibiotic prophylaxis does provide some protection against
PID
but does not clearly indicate who should be screened and for which pathogens and who should be treated and with which antibiotics. Demographic features useful for identifying who should receive antibiotic prophylaxis are: a history of
PID
, single status, nulliparity, and youth (especially reliable for chlamydial infection). Screening for bacterial vaginosis involves diagnosis based on 3 of 4 criteria: characteristic vaginal discharge, positive amine test, raised vaginal pH, and the presence of clue cells on microscopy of wet or stained preparations of vaginal discharge. Since C. trachomatis is the most important pathogen, drugs sensitive to it should be administered: tetracyclines and erythromycin. Screening women seeking abortion for sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) provides an opportunity to educate them about STDs and treatment compliance and to contact their partners for investigation, treatment, and contact-tracing to reduce the STD-infected pool in the community.
...
PMID:Preventing pelvic infection after abortion. 854 9
This study compares transvaginal color and pulsed Doppler (TVCD), laparoscopic and clinical findings in 102 women with proven
pelvic inflammatory disease
(
PID
). Seventy-two (72) of them had acute symptoms, 11 presented with chronic
pelvic pain
and 19 patients were infertility cases suspected of tubal etiology. Uterine sonographic findings were demonstrated in 72 patients (70.6%). Free fluid in the cul-de-sac was demonstrated in 39 (38.2%) patients. Ovarian enlargement as the only finding was demonstrated in 6 (5.9%) patients, 22 (21.6%) presented with tubular adnexal structure, while in 74 (72.5%) patients it was of a complex nature. Color flow was obtained in all 6 patients presenting with ovarian enlargement, in 12 (54.5%) of those presenting with tubular adnexal structure, and in 56 (75.7%) of those with complex adnexal mass. Ovarian morphology was clearly delineated from adnexal mass in 59 patients (55.9%). The ipsilateral ovarian flow was altered in 50 of them (84.7%). The mean resistance index (RI) in patients with acute symptoms was 0.53 +/- 0.09 (+/-SD). It significantly differed from those obtained in patients with chronic
pelvic pain
(RI = 0.71 +/- 0.07) and infertility cases (RI = 0.73 +/- 0.09). We concluded that transvaginal color Doppler is useful additional tool in diagnosis and treatment monitoring in patients with
PID
.
...
PMID:The value of transvaginal color Doppler in the assessment of pelvic inflammatory disease. 857 60
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