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

This study assessed whether hysteroscopy can provide information concerning the cause of chronic pelvic pain. We prospectively evaluated the findings in 547 consecutive patients who had laparoscopy to evaluate chronic pelvic pain at a large, referral-based clinic and outpatient suite of a suburban hospital. Forty-eight had previous hysterectomies. The remaining 499 had hysteroscopy during the same surgery and met the following qualifications: chronic pelvic pain, dysmenorrhea, dyspareunia, dysuria, back pain, pelvic pressure or dyschezia for a duration greater than six months and previous failed medical therapy. When endometriosis was the primary diagnosis at laparoscopy, hysteroscopy revealed abnormalities in 62 (32.5%) of 191 patients. At hysteroscopy, 46 of 105 patients (43.8%) with single or multiple leiomyomas of significant sizes diagnosed laparoscopically were noted to have pathology within the uterine cavity. Ten of 11 patients (90.9%) found to have ovarian cysts underwent hysteroscopy. Four (40%) had uterine abnormalities; the most common was cervical stenosis. Pelvic adhesions were found in 118 patients (21.6%). Eighty-nine underwent hysteroscopy, and 24 (27%) had intrauterine abnormalities. Ninety-six patients (17.5%) who underwent laparoscopic evaluation had endometriosis and pelvic adhesions. Ninety-three of these underwent hysteroscopy, and abnormalities were noted in 26 (28.0%). In eight women (1.5%) no abnormality was found at laparoscopy. Two underwent hysteroscopy, and no abnormality was noted in either woman. Hysteroscopy provides useful, adjunctive information and may improve the diagnosis and treatment of chronic pelvic pain.
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PMID:Use of hysteroscopy in addition to laparoscopy for evaluating chronic pelvic pain. 765 Jun 54

Pelvic adhesions may be responsible for pelvic pain, at least partially, in the following conditions: sequelae of past infection, chronic active inflammatory state, endometriosis, post-operative adhesions. The problem in the presence of adhesions is to determine whether pain is mechanical, inflammatory and/or linked to associated ovarian dystrophy, and what is the psychological component. The postulate "adhesion = pain" is far from constant and there is no systematic relationship between clinical picture and anatomical findings. After careful clinical and laboratory evaluation, celioscopy is the key diagnostic procedure. It should include thorough examination of all pelvic organs, of the abdomen in general and the peri-hepatic region in particular. A diagnosis of psychosomatic pain can be made only in the absence of any macroscopic, histological and bacteriological lesion, though bearing in mind that this term certainly covers failure to recognise other causes.
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PMID:[Painful pelvic adhesion syndrome]. 773 53

Acute salpingitis (AS) has a major impact on the reproductive health of women. In this study second-look laparoscopy was assessed for its ability to predict reproductive function after AS. We questioned 158 women who had had a second-look laparoscopy with tubal dye insufflation after laparoscopically proven AS between September 1984 and August 1989. The answers of 69 women with at least two years of involuntary infertility were analyzed. The mean follow-up period was 76 months (range 53-108 months). Second-look laparoscopy revealed bilateral tubal occlusion in 21.7% (15/69). Bilateral tubal occlusion was found in 9.5% (2/21) after mild stage, 20% (4/20) after moderate stage and 32.1% (9/28) after severe stage AS. The rate of infertility during follow-up was 9.5% (stage I), 35% (stage II) and 39.9% (stage III). Eighty per cent (12/15) of women with proven bilateral tubal occlusion after treated AS had involuntary infertility, and 14.8% (8/54; P = 0.000001) of women with one or both tubes patent also had infertility. Specificity, sensitivity and positive predictive value for subsequent infertility were 85.2%, 80% and 84.1%, respectively. Pelvic adhesions (21/69) were strongly correlated with bilateral tubal occlusion (8/21; 38.1%; P = 0.029), a history of chronic pelvic pain (14/21; 66.7%; P = 0.00024), as well as failure to achieve an intrauterine pregnancy (10/21; 47.6%; P = 0.024). Recurrent pelvic infections occurred in 16% (12/69) and ectopic pregnancies in 7.3% (5/69). Operations for infertility and pelvic pain (excluding ectopic pregnancy), were carried out in 11.6% (8/69). We conclude that second-look laparoscopy after treated AS have accurate evaluation of reproductive function.
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PMID:A study of second-look laparoscopy after acute salpingitis. 884 36

Pelvic adhesions constitute one of the main problems in infertility management. In this study the role of CO2 laser in managing this problem was assessed. One hundred sixty-seven patients with pelvic adhesions suffering from chronic pelvic pain and inability to conceive [Primary infertility 58 (34.7%), secondary infertility 109 (65.3%)] were included in this study. The patients were categorized by diagnostic laparoscopy as mild, 72 (43.1%) group I; moderate, 58 (34.7%) group II; and severe 37 (22.2%) group III. All patients were subjected to operative laparoscopy (3 puncture technique) and CO2 laser adhesiolysis using the Surgilase 50. All patients were followed for one year after the procedure. Complete relief of pain was observed in 60 (83.3%), 36 (62.1%) and 19 (51.4%) women in group I, II, and III, respectively. Pregnancy occurred in 51 (70.8%), 28 (48.3%), and 8 (21.6%) patients in group I, II, and III, respectively. CO2 laser is a precise and effective means of pelvic adhesiolysis in properly selected patients.
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PMID:Laparoscopic Pelvic Adhesiolysis Using CO2 Laser 907 78