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

Presented is the first case report of intraperitoneal Neisseria gonorrhoea infection after tubal ligation. The patient, a 34-year-old women who underwent bilateral tubal ligation 10 years prior to presentation, complained of right lower quadrant pain, fever, chills, anorexia, and constipation. Prior to sterilization, she had been treated at least 3 times for pelvic inflammatory disease (PID). Laparotomy revealed 200 mL of free pus in the abdominal cavity, induration of the proximal stump of the right fallopian tube, and a tuboperitoneal fistula. the intraperitoneal culture was positive for N gonorrhoea and pathology demonstrated acute salpingitis. Treatment with ampicillin, gentamicin, and clindamycin eliminated the infection, although uterine and adnexal tenderness persisted at the 6-week follow-up. Falk's postulate that cornual resection prevents reinfection with PID of the upper genital tract apparently cannot be extended to isthmic interruption of the lower and upper tracts. Since this case demonstrates that there can be ascending gonococcal infection in women with prior tubal sterilization, PID should be part of the differential diagnosis of all sterilized women who present with acute pelvic pain.
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PMID:Gonococcal peritonitis after tubal ligation. A case report. 177 35

The study was carried out on 175 patients who underwent laparoscopy together with search for chlamydia in the peritoneal fluid when they were having investigations for sterility or for pelvic pain. These patients are classified into three groups according to the clinical and laparoscopic features: 50 cases of acute salpingitis. 104 cases of tubal sterility and 21 control cases who were normal on laparoscopy. The mean age was 25.7 years for acute salpingitis and 30.4 years for tubal sterility. The purpose of this study was to work out the role played by chlamydia trachomatis in tubal phatology and two techniques were used at the same time: The identification of chlamydia trachomatis in 175 samples of peritoneal fluid taken during a laparoscopy; Research for anti-chlamydia antibodies in serum using an indirect micro-immunofluorescent technique. Cell cultures were performed after the peritoneal fluid had been centrifuged. It had been in transport medium 2 SP and frozen. Our technical methods for isolating chlamydia (microplaque culture on Hela lines, incubation in the presence of cycloheximide and research for chlamydial inclusion bodies using direct immunofluorescence with monoclonal antibodies and 2 successive passages of the cells) have allowed us to confirm that chlamydia was present in 44% of cases of acute salpingitis and in 37% of cases of tubal sterility. The search for anti-chlamydial antibodies in the serum in indirect immunofluorescence with a single antigen (of L2 serotype) gave positive results which were comparable to those in other studies, i.e. 50% of positive serological results in acute salpingitis and 63% in tubal sterility.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Role of Chlamydia trachomatis in tubal pathology (acute salpingitis and tubal sterility). Microbiological study of 175 samples of peritoneal fluid]. 272 46

A review was made of clinical and laboratory findings in 104 women who, during 1978 to 1981, were subjected to laparoscopy because of symptoms suggestive of acute salpingitis, and who harbored Chlamydia trachomatis but not Neisseria gonorrhoeae in the genital tract. The patients with acute salpingitis (N = 76) did not differ significantly from those with visually normal fallopian tubes (N = 28) in regard to age distribution, parity, contraceptive method used, proportion of women with urethritis symptoms, increased vaginal discharge, vomiting, diarrhea, elevated rectal temperature, elevated white blood cell count, and palpable pelvic masses. The acute salpingitis patients more often had irregular bleeding and an elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate, whereas the patients without acute salpingitis more often had a short history of pelvic pain. The two groups overlapped considerably with respect to the number of symptoms and clinical signs of pelvic infection. The results emphasize the value of laparoscopy in the diagnosis or exclusion of a tubal infection in association with a chlamydial genital infection and pelvic pain, even if there are comparatively few additional symptoms of ascending infection.
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PMID:Laparoscopy in women with chlamydial infection and pelvic pain: a comparison of patients with and without salpingitis. 621 34

Women with laparoscopically verified acute salpingitis (AS) were studied, and 151 were classified as having: chlamydia-associated AS (C-AS), gonococcal-associated AS (G-AS), and nonchlamydial, nongonococcal-associated AS (NCNG-AS). Patients with G-AS were more often febrile (rectal temperature greater than 38 degrees C) and more often had a moderately elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) (16 to 30 mm/hr) compared to other patients. Women with NCNG-AS were more likely to have a normal ESR and a mild inflammatory reaction laparoscopically. C-AS women were more likely to have had pelvic pain for more than 3 days before seeking treatment and to have an ESR of greater than 30 mm/hr on admission. Predisposing factors to AS, such as insertion of intrauterine device, hysterosalpingography, and curettage within 4 weeks of admission, were more common in the C-AS group. The tubal inflammatory changes in the C-AS group were generally more severe than expected from the relatively benign clinical course.
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PMID:Differences in some clinical and laboratory parameters in acute salpingitis related to culture and serologic findings. 645 Nov 76

The study objective was to record the incidence of Chlamydia trachomatis infections among patients admitted for legal abortion in Ullevaal Hospital (Oslo, Norway) and to follow those women harboring chlamydia, particularly those in whom it caused postoperative infections. 218 women admitted consecutively for abortion in the 1st trimester in 1980 were included in the study. The abortion procedure used was dilatation and vacuum aspiration. The diagnosis of pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) was made on the clinical basis of pelvic pain, adnexal masses, increased erythrocyte sedimentation rate, and fever. Patients who developed acute salpingitis were treated with doxycycline. Patients who harbored C trachomatis were recalled for follow up about 3 months after the abortion. Of the 218 patients, C trachomatis was isolated from the cervix in 30 (13.8%), N gonorrheae in 2 (2.8%), and both C trachomatis and N gonorrheae in 2. 7 of the 30 (23.3%) patients harboring C trachomatis developed PID. All the infections occurred in the 1st 2 weeks after the abortion. None of the patients with cervical gonorrhea developed salpingitis. 21 of the chlamydia positive patients attended for follow up 3 months after the abortion. Of the 7 patients with pelvic infection, 6 attended. 4 of these women had an appreciable rise in chlamydial IgG antibody titre while 2 had raised but unchanged titres. Another 4 patients had a 4-fold or more rise in titre but no clinical evidence of infection. Study findings indicate that patients harboring C trachomatis in the cervix at abortion are at high risk of developing postoperative infections and that C trachomatis is a major etiological agent in salpingitis occurring after abortion.
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PMID:Therapeutic abortion and Chlamydia trachomatis infection. 680 51

Ectopic pregnancy is a common gynecological condition which usually presents with symptoms of acute abdomen. During the period 1976 to 1978, 152 cases of ectopic pregnancy were treated in our department. About one ectopic pregnancy was treated for every 100 infants delivered. Most of the cases were seen during summer time. Of the patients 43% were between 26 to 30 years of age. From their previous history, 47% reported one or more terminations of pregnancy and 33% recurrence of acute salpingitis. The majority of the ectopic pregnancies were located in the tube. Abdominal pregnancy was observed in three women, one of whom delivered, with the aid of laparotomy, a live infant. All the women reported pelvic pain, whereas shock appeared in only 23% of the cases. Culdocentesis gave false negative results in 14.15% of the cases. Preoperative diagnosis was based on laparoscopy in 28 cases. Dilatation and curettage (D and C) with endometrial biopsy disclosed decidual endometrium without chorionic villi in 37% and Arias-Stella cells in 68% of cases. Salpingectomy was performed in 52% of the cases, and plastic surgery of the tube in 16%.
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PMID:Ectopic pregnancy: outcome of 152 cases. 722 61

Chlamydia trachomatis was recovered from the fallopian tubes of ten women with acute salpingitis. The median age of the patients was 19 years. The duration of pelvic pain before consulting a physician ranged from three to 27 days (median, seven days). Half of the patients complained of irregular bleeding, and nine reported increased vaginal discharge. One patient had a rectal temperature of greater than 38 C, and one had an erythrocyte sedimentation rate of less than 15 mm/hr. At laparoscopy, mild inflammatory changes were seen in the tubes of three patients, five had moderately severe inflammation, and two had pelvic peritonitis. C. trachomatis could not be isolated from the cervix of two patients. Paired sera were available from eight patients, six of whom had a significant rise in titer of IgG antibodies to C. trachomatis. Two women had IgM antibodies. Two other women, who harbored Neisseria gonorrhoeae in the cervix, had antibodies to gonococcal pili; one had a significant decrease in titer. This latter patient was one of the patients with a stationary titer of antibodies to C trachomatis. One patient had a stationary titer of antibodies to Mycoplasma hominis. In general, chlamydial salpingitis seems to have relatively benign symptoms. Neither the failure to isolate C. trachomatis from the cervix nor a stationary titer of antibodies to the organism precludes a chlamydial etiology of acute salpingitis.
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PMID:Acute salpingitis with Chlamydia trachomatis isolated from the fallopian tubes: clinical, cultural, and serologic findings. 725 92

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

Chlamydia trachomatis is one the most important sexually transmitted diseases; it can cause serious sequelae despite the absence of symptoms in some people. It's estimated that about 25% of women who have acute salpingitis become infertile, and chlamydial infection is the commonest cause. The introduction of screening programs for its detection are still a topic of discussion. The literature shows that the total cost of examination and treatment of complications known to be associated with genital chlamydial infection (PID, chronic pelvic pain, tubal factor infertility) is generally higher than the total cost of a large-scale Chlamydia screening program. The selection of a diagnostic test for detection of chlamydial genital infection depends on availability, local expertise, and prevalence of Chlamydia trachomatis in the test population. Cell culture is too expensive in nonendemic regions, so the use of non-culture techniques is very attractive. PCR (polymerase chain reaction) and LCR (ligase chain reaction) are actually the two most commonly used alternatives to conventional methods for detecting STD agents. In fact, PCR and LCR have proved useful for detection of Chlamydia trachomatis in cervical and urethral samples both in symptomatic and asymptomatic women. Recently, testing of first-void urine (FVU) specimens with these techniques has shown that the amplification tests are as sensitive as tests with endocervical swab cultures.
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PMID:Update on Chlamydia trachomatis. 1081 17