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

The effectiveness and safety of vaginal misoprostol, without the need for postexpulsion systematic curettage, were investigated in 120 Cuban women seeking late first-trimester abortion (10-12 weeks). Women received 800 mcg of misoprostol vaginally every 24 hours, for a maximum of three doses. Complete abortion occurred in 104 women (87%); 87 women (73%) aborted after a single dose, 11 (9%) required two doses, and 6 (5%) received a third dose. The remaining 16 women (13%) underwent surgical abortion. Mean hemoglobin decreased from 12.2 mg/dl before treatment to 11.6 mg/dl after abortion--a difference that was statistically but not clinically significant. Side effects--which disappeared within 2 hours--included nausea (22%), vomiting (17%), diarrhea (54%), dizziness (25%), headache (19%), and chills (72%). Although 99% of subjects reported pelvic pain (99%), only 10% requested an analgesic for pain relief. Vaginal bleeding persisted for a mean of 8 days. According to logistic regression analysis, the only variable significantly associated with treatment success was race. The success rate was 94% among White women compared with 73% among Black and Black Cuban women. The acceptable expulsion period, the fact that a postabortion systematic curettage was not required, the clinically insignificant hemoglobin loss, and the high success rate all demonstrate that misoprostol administered vaginally may be a valid method for interrupting late first-trimester pregnancies.
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PMID:Vaginal misoprostol for late first trimester abortion. 967 40

The recurrence of endometriosis varies from 6% to 10% and, among the non-gynaecological sites, the bowel is involved in 12%-37%. Various symptoms, such as dysmenorrhea, dyspareunia, chronic pelvic pain, diarrhoea, constipation, cyclic rectal bleeding, colic-abdominal pain up to intestinal occlusion characterize this pathology. Surgery seems to be the best treatment especially for gastrointestinal symptoms; conservative surgery should be performed, particularly in young patients. Four cases of intestinal endometriosis were reevaluated.
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PMID:Rectosigmoid endometriosis: diagnosis and surgical management. 985 8

Objective: To assess the long-term genitourinary and gastrointestinal complaints following presacral neurectomy.Design: A prospective postoperative follow-up of patients who underwent laparoscopic presacral neurectomy and treatment of endometriosis.Materials and Methods: The mean follow-up of the 67 women (mean age 27.5 years, range 16-58 years) was an average of 36.8 months with a range of 6-69 years. Main outcome variables include diarrhea, constipation, bladder and urinary complaints, vaginal dryness, dyspareunia, and orgasm. The degree of pain and dysmenorrhea after surgery was also elevated.Results: Diarrhea was reported to have improved after surgery in 39.1% of the patients and none reported any worsening. Constipation improved in 28.6% and worsened in 12.5%. Only one patient suffered from debilitating constipation. Bladder and urinary problems were improved on 25.0% and worsened in 19.2%. A similar proportion of women (19.6%) reported improvement and worsening vaginal dryness. Pain during intercourse improved in 58.9% and worsened in 8.9%. The ability to achieve orgasm improved in 21.6% and worsened in 2.7%. Postoperatively, pain was improved by 80-100% in 46.6% of the women, by 50-80% in 36.5%, by less than 50% in 6.4%, and did not improve in 9.5%. Dysmenorrhea was improved by 80-100% in 35.2% of the women, by 50-80% in 38.8%, by less than 50% in 14.9%, and did not improve in 11.1%. Twelve of 16 patients trying to become pregnant were successful following surgery, two with the aid of in vitro fertilization.Conclusion: After laparoscopic presacral neurectomy, constipation and bladder and urinary problems were reported to have worsened in only a minority of patients. However, diarrhea and dyspareunia improved in a large proportion of patients. Since pelvic pain was relieved by more than 50% in 83.1%, the procedure seems to be associated with an acceptable rate of long-term side effects.
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PMID:Are the long-term adverse effects of laparoscopic presacral neurectomy for the management of central pain associated with endometriosis acceptable? 1083 74

The authors report a rare clinical case of coincidence appendicitis and Fallopian tube torsion. A 14-years-old girl is presented with acute pelvic pain, dysuria and diarrhoea. Acute appendicitis and right side Fallopian tube torsion were detected by laparotomy. Symptoms, differential diagnoses, etiology and diagnostic procedures are discussed.
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PMID:[Fallopian tube torsion in appendicitis--case report]. 1251 7

This study was designed to evaluate the benefits of neoadjuvant chemotherapy prior to chemoradiation and surgery in patients with locally advanced rectal cancer. Patients with previously untreated primary rectal cancer, reviewed in a multidisciplinary meeting and considered to have locally advanced disease on the basis of physical examination and imaging (MRI+CT n=30, CT alone n=6), were recruited. Patients received protracted venous infusion 5-FU (300 mg m(-2) day(-1) for 12 weeks) with mitomycin C (MMC) (7 mg m(-2) i.v. bolus every 6 weeks). Starting on week 13, 5-FU was reduced to 200 mg m(-2) day(-1) and concomitant pelvic radiotherapy 45 Gy in 25 fractions was commenced followed by 5.4-9 Gy boost to tumour bed. Surgery was planned 6 weeks after chemoradiation. Postoperatively, patients received 12 weeks of MMC and 5-FU at the same preoperative doses. Between January 99 and August 01, 36 eligible patients were recruited. Median age was 63 years (range=40-85). Following neoadjuvant chemotherapy, radiological tumour response was 27.8% (one CR and nine PRs) and no patient had progressive disease. In addition, 65% of patients had a symptomatic response including improvement in diarrhoea/constipation (59%), reduced rectal bleeding (60%) and diminished pelvic pain/tenesmus (78%). Following chemoradiation, tumour regression occurred in 80.6% (six CRs and 23 PRs; 95% CI=64-91.8%) and only one patient still had an inoperable tumour. R0 resection was achieved in 28 patients (82%). When compared with initial clinical staging, the pathological downstaging rate in T and/or N stage was 73.5% and pathological CR was found in one patient. Neoadjuvant systemic chemotherapy as a prelude to synchronous chemoradiation can be administered with negligible risk of disease progression and produces considerable symptomatic response with associated tumour regression.
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PMID:Neoadjuvant systemic fluorouracil and mitomycin C prior to synchronous chemoradiation is an effective strategy in locally advanced rectal cancer. 1267 97

Irritable bowel syndrome is a common and often unpredictable disorder with an increased incidence among women. It is characterized by abdominal pain associated with constipation-diarrhea. Recent research, current theories about etiology and pathophysiology, diagnosis, management, and overlapping conditions such as interstitial cystitis and chronic pelvic pain are discussed.
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PMID:Overlapping conditions in women with irritable bowel syndrome. 1577 89

This report describes a rare case of high-grade endometrial stromal sarcoma (ESS) arising from pathologically confirmed endometriosis in the cul-de-sac. A 37-year-old woman presented with irregular menstruation, pelvic pain, and diarrhea. Magnetic resonance imaging and colon biopsy suggested endometriotic nodule of the cul-de-sac. The tumor size was reduced with hormonal therapy, and the residual tumor was excised, resulting in the pathologic diagnosis of endometriosis. Two years later, a soft mass reappeared with rapid growth. Tumor extraction was performed, and the histopathologic diagnosis was high-grade ESS. Neither hormonal therapy nor chemotherapy was effective, and the patient died 6 months postoperatively. ESS should be included in the differential diagnosis of malignant transformation of endometriosis.
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PMID:A case of high-grade endometrial stromal sarcoma arising from endometriosis in the cul-de-sac. 1668 80

The aim of this study was to assess the long-term outcome of treating severely symptomatic women with deep infiltrating intestinal endometriosis by laparoscopic segmental rectosigmoid resection. Detailed intraoperative and postoperative records and questionnaires (preoperatively, 1 month postoperatively and every 6 months for 3 years) were collected from 22 women. The estimated blood loss during surgery was 290 +/- 162 ml (range 180-600), and average hospital stay was 8 days (range 6-19). One woman required blood transfusion after surgery. Two cases were converted to laparotomy. One woman had early dehiscence of the anastomosis. Six months after surgery, there was a significant reduction of symptom scores (greater than 50% for most types of pain) related to intestinal localisation of endometriosis (P < 0.05). Score improvements were maintained during the whole period of follow up. Noncyclic pelvic pain scores showed significant reductions (P < 0.05) after 6 and 12 months, but there was a high recurrence rate later. Dysmenorrhoea and dyspareunia improved in 18/21 and 14/18 women with preoperative symptoms, respectively. Constipation, diarrhoea and rectal bleeding improved in all affected women for the whole period of follow up. Laparoscopic segmental rectosigmoid resection seems safe and effective in women with deep infiltrating colorectal endometriosis resulting in significant reductions in painful and dysfunctional symptoms associated with deep bowel involvement.
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PMID:Surgical outcome and long-term follow up after laparoscopic rectosigmoid resection in women with deep infiltrating endometriosis. 1819 Mar 87

Endometriosis is the presence of endometrial cells and stroma at ectopic sites outside the uterine cavity. The natural history of endometriosis is uncertain, its etiology unknown, the clinical presentation inconsistent, diagnosis difficult and the treatment poorly standardized. It causes significant morbidity due to pelvic pain and infertility among 15-25% of women during their reproductive age. The benign disease causes peritoneal inflammation, fibrosis, adhesions and ovarian cysts but displays features of malignancy, like neo-vascularization, local invasion and distant metastasis. Mechanical, hormonal, immunological, environmental and genetic factors have been implicated in its etiology but provide inconclusive explanations. Present study was carried out on ectopic and eutopic endometriotic tissue specimens collected during laproscopy/laprotomy from cases of endometriosis. mRNA was isolated from the tissues and converted to cDNA by RT and subsequently subjected to differential display Polymerase Chain Reaction using seven sets of arbitrary primers. A unique band was identified only in the ectopic endometriotic tissue, which was sequenced. BLAST search results revealed sequence homology to shigella bacterial DNA leading us to hypothesize that infection may be playing a role in the etiology of endometriosis. This is the first report implicating the role of bacterial infection in the etiology of endometriosis. Shigella is known to invade the mucosa of the colon through the feco-oral route causing Shigellosis. The pathogenesis of shigellosis involves inflammation, ulceration, haemorrhage, tissue destruction and fibrosis of the colonic mucosa resulting in abdominal pain and diarrhoea/dysentery, this is similar to the pathogenesis of endometriosis which also involves inflammation, haemorrhage, tissue destruction and fibrotic adhesions of the pelvic peritoneum resulting in abdominal pain and infertility. The non-motile shigella bacteria invade the deeper mucosal layers by travelling from cell to cell of colonic epithelium, reaching the lamina propria of the colonic mucosa. We propose that, by the same mechanism, the bacteria travel across the colon wall to reach the outer peritoneal surface of the colon, which is in close proximity to the posterior uterine surface in the Pouch of Douglas, the site which incidentally happens to be the commonest site of early endometriosis. Our hypothesis therefore proposes that shigella or shigella-like organisms may be the trigger for the initiation of immunological changes in the pelvic peritoneum causing endometriosis. Once the endometrial cells are implanted at ectopic sites they are sustained by hormones and angiogenic factors. Hence "Infection hypothesis" provides a novel explanation for the etiopathogenesis of endometriosis.
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PMID:Role of Shigella infection in endometriosis: a novel hypothesis. 1788 83

Endometriosis is defined as the presence of endometrial glands and stroma outside the uterine cavity. Although the exact pathophysiology is unclear, endometriosis is a well-known cause of pelvic pain and infertility in reproductive-aged women. Endometriosis can have extrapelvic manifestations relevant for colorectal surgeons to appreciate, such as cyclic constipation, diarrhea, hematochezia, and dyschezia. The treatment of endometriosis involves a combination of medical and surgical interventions where close collaboration between the gynecologist and colorectal surgeon can help achieve prolonged periods of symptom remission.
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PMID:Endometriosis for the colorectal surgeon. 2162 24


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