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Query: UMLS:C0030794 (
pelvic pain
)
4,056
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An integrated health and family planning program, operated by the University of Ife Teaching Hospital, was assessed to determine the impact of the integrated approach on family planning service utilization among the predominantly Yoruba residents of the city. In Nigeria, family planning services are generally delivered in clinics which have little or no connection with medical facilities, and service utilization is low. In 1979 the hospital decided to include family planning as part of the routine medical services provided at its 8 clinics located within a 25 kilometer radius of the hospital. Staff members at the clinics were trained in family planning. Trained female fieldworkers conducted motivational activities to encourage the women in the community to use the family planning services of the clinic. The program provided women with an opportunity to obtain contraceptives in a familiar setting and as part of their routine medical care. Neither parental nor spousal consent was required. Yoruba men tend to oppose family planning. Data for the study was obtained from the records of the program's 1495 new acceptors served by the program during its first 2 years of operation. 50.6% of the acceptors were 25-34 years of age, and another 31.7% were between 35-44 years of age. Very few teenagers utilized the services. 96% of the wome were married and they had an average of 4.4 living children. 56% were Catholic, 25% were Protestant, and 16% were Muslim. 37% were illiterate, and another 42.5% could barely read or write. Most were wives of government workers or service men. 88% had never used a modern contraceptive, and 94.5% were not using a method at the time of their first clinic visit. 68.4% of the acceptors were referred to the clinic by the fieldworkers or other health personnel. Only 11.2% sought the services on their own. 85% of the acceptors choose oral contraceptives (OCs), 13% had IUDs inserted, 0.3% were sterilized, and the remaining 2% chose other methods. The low sterilization rate probably reflected the fact that spousal consent was required for sterilization. Side effects reported by the OC users included asthma (9.6%), headaches (5.2%), phlebitis (3.5%), jaundice (1.7%),
chest pain
(1.5%), depression (1.5%), scanty menses (0.8%), and high blood pressure (0.4%). Among IUD users, 10.8% had intermenstrual bleeding, 18.4% reported
pelvic pain
, and another 6.8% reported a variety of other problems. 42.1% of the acceptors wanted no more children, and the remainder wanted to avoid the hardships associated with traditional methods of spacing. Correlation analysis revealed that the total number of living children was negatively related to maternal education and that women with sons wanted significantly fewer additional children than women with fewer or no sons. 51% of the acceptors were continuing contraceptive use at the time of the study. The study confirmed the feasibility of an integrated approach. The findings should be of use to government officials who want to improve service utilization in the national family planning program.
...
PMID:Integrated family planning services: a Nigerian experience. 651 Mar 20
Neuromodulation in one form or another has been studied for decades for various disease states. Although its mechanism of action remains un-explained, numerous clinical success stories suggest it is a therapy with efficacy and durability. Controlled studies have led to the approval of sacral neuromodulation for urinary urgency and frequency, urinary retention, and urinary urge incontinence. The future holds hopeful possibilities for the application of neuromodulation, namely in the areas of interstitial cystitis, in-tractable pain syndromes, fecal incontinence and constipation, spinal cord injury, and erectile dysfunction. Neuromodulators have also been used in nonurologic conditions, including chronic headaches and intractable
chest pain
. In adults and children, in the neurologically intact and neurologically impaired, neuromodulation has been shown to improve the quality of life of those suffering chronic disease states. Neuromodulation is changing the future of urology. Treatment of voiding dysfunction and likely other disorders, such as
pelvic pain
, sexual dysfunction, and bowel disorders, will no longer rely only on medications that are "OK" or destructive-reconstructive procedures that suffer from significant complications. Rather, by modulating the nerves, the urologists will treat these disorders in a minimally invasive fashion and neuromodulation will become the first-line therapy before any major surgery is undertaken.
...
PMID:Expanding indications for neuromodulation. 1569 77
Somatic symptoms are common in primary care and clinicians often prescribe antidepressants as adjunctive therapy. There are many possible reasons why this may work, including treating comorbid depression or anxiety, inhibition of ascending pain pathways, inhibition of prefrontal cortical areas that are responsible for "attention" to noxious stimuli, and the direct effects of the medications on the syndrome. There are good theoretical reasons why antidepressants with balanced norepinephrine and serotonin effects may be more effective than those that act predominantly on one pathway, though head-to-head comparisons are lacking. For the 11 painful syndromes review in this article, cognitive-behavioral therapy is most consistently demonstrated to be effective, with various antidepressants having more or less randomized controlled data supporting or refuting effectiveness. This article reviews the randomized controlled trial data for the use of antidepressant and cognitive-behavior therapy for 11 somatic syndromes: irritable bowel syndrome, chronic back pain, headache, fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome, tinnitus, menopausal symptoms, chronic facial pain, noncardiac
chest pain
, interstitial cystitis, and chronic
pelvic pain
. For some syndromes, the data for or against treatment effectiveness is relatively robust, for many, however, the data, one way or the other is scanty.
...
PMID:Antidepressants and cognitive-behavioral therapy for symptom syndromes. 1657 78
A case of intravenous leiomyomatosis (IVL) with histological features of a lipoleiomyoma (intravenous lipoleiomyoma) in a 48-year-old woman is reported. The patient, with the tumor located in the uterus and extended up on the right side of the heart through the inferior vena cava, was diagnosed as having a cardiac mass. She displayed symptoms of dyspnea,
chest pain
due to the cardiac mass, as well as
pelvic pain
and dysmenorrhea. She underwent cardiac surgery because of a right atrial mass, and the histopathological diagnosis was leiomyoma without the knowledge of a uterine mass. Afterwards, a right adnexial mass was detected in the pelvis, and a total hysterectomy-bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy was performed for the adnexial mass, which was also diagnosed as leiomyoma. In this case report, we describe an intravenous lipoleiomyomatosis of the uterus which, at the initial clinical presentation, showed cardiovascular symptoms. We emphasize the histopathological features and the differential diagnosis of this rare tumor in the light of the literature.
...
PMID:Intravenous lipoleiomyomatosis of uterus with cardiac extension: a case report. 2109 70
Angiosarcomas of the uterine is a malignant and poor prognostic tumor and can either be a primary sarcoma or arising secondary to radiotherapy of a more complex tumor. Primary uterine angiosarcomas are exceptional and probably arise from embryonic vascular remnants, teratoma or from the rich uterine vasculature. We reported a rare case of primary angiosarcoma of uterine that at the time of diagnosis presented with sign and symptom of local and distant metastasis. The patient presented with dyspnea,
chest pain
, and history of vaginal bleeding and
pelvic pain
. The physical exam revealed pallor, prominent jugular pulse pressure, a palpable fixed mass in the pelvic however vaginal exam was unremarkable. Transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) revealed massive pericardial effusion and also a large mass in the right atrium. The abdominal ultrasound showed echogenic and poor echogenic segments in uterine mass combined with central necrosis. The patient underwent total hysterectomy and Bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy followed by radiotherapy and adjuvant chemotherapy. The patient underwent open heart surgery with resection of cardiac mass and further received a four cycle of radiotherapy (50 MG) to the mediastinum. The further follow-up (6 month) revealed no recurrence of tumor in a mediastinum. However, patient died from metastasis to the liver and its hepatic failure sequels.
...
PMID:A Road to the Heart From Uterine Closet: A Case Report. 2943 98