Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0030794 (pelvic pain)
4,056 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Pelvic phlebography, principally phlebography via endo-uterine access, can reveal states of chronic venous stasis in gynecological disorders. The existence of such stasis is reflected by the presence of varicoceles and of utero-vaginal and pampiniform plexuses. In some cases, dilatation of the ovarian vein raises the question of primary valvular insufficiency of these veins. The following were studied here on the basis of phlebographic data: the problem of pelvic pain and of Masters and Allen syndrome; pelvic stasis in the sequelae of phlebitis and of pelvic phlebitis; the problem of primary venous insufficiency (?); and the role of such stasis in various gynecological disorders. The pathogenic role of such stasis, either as the chief factor or as an accompanying or favouring factor, should be taken into consideration when determining the management.
...
PMID:[Pelvic venous stasis. Gynecologic impact. Is it possible to individualize gynecologic phlebology?]. 194 75

Absence of inferior vena cava (IVC) is an uncommon congenital abnormality with few clinical repercussions. We report the case of a 39 year old man with chronic pelvic pain, in whom a macroscopic hematuria episode occurring during exercise led to the discovery of an echographic pelvic venous stasis syndrome. Abdominal and pelvic computed tomography scanning then magnetic resonance imaging of inferior vena cava revealed absence of the postrenal segment of IVC with azygos continuation and considerable collateral venous derivations, leading to pelvic cavernoma.
...
PMID:[Effort-induced macroscopic hematuria revealing segmental and congenital absence of inferior vena cava]. 1002 7

39 women using the Lippes loop C, and complaining of chronic pelvic pain dating from after insertion of the IUD, were investigated by laparoscopy and transuterine pelvic venography in the premenstrual period of the cycle. Patients complaining only of cramp-like pain similar to spasmodic dysmenorrhea were not included. Other types of pain noticed were dull aching low abdomen, deep seated pelvic pain with associated dyspareunia, and low backache mainly on the sacrum. Pain was attributed to the presence of pelvic variocele diagnosed by laparoscopy (52%), and venography (95%), chronic pelvic inflammatory disease (28%), and pelvic adhesions (8%). The sites of maximum pain correlated well with the sites of maximum varicosities and/or venous stasis. Menorrhagia was associated with pain in one-third of the cases and was explained on the basis of increased pelvic vascularity, chronic pelvic inflammatory disease, and cystic changes in the ovaries. The possible factors predisposing to uterine perforation during venography in 3 cases are discussed.
...
PMID:Chronic pelvic pain in Lippes IUD users. Laparoscopic and venographic evaluation. 1227 88