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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
.
...
PMID:Use of hysteroscopy in addition to laparoscopy for evaluating chronic pelvic pain. 765 Jun 54
Studies reveal endometriosis to be present in 38-51% of women undergoing laparoscopy for chronic
pelvic pain
. Symptoms attributable to endometriosis include dysmenorrhea, dyspareunia, generalized
pelvic pain
,
dyschezia
, and radiation of pain to the back or leg. Psychological factors may also contribute to a more intense pain experience. Medical therapy provides symptom relief in 72-93% of patients, although recurrence is common following treatment discontinuation. Surgical therapy has had varying results for long-term pain relief; adequacy of the initial surgical treatment appears to be a critical factor. Important adjunctive measures include presacral neurectomy and excisional techniques to remove deep, fibrotic, retroperitoneal lesions. The quality of life of women with endometriosis will improve with greater focus on achieving the long-term relief of
pelvic pain
. Limitation of pain recurrence would benefit the patient greatly, by providing symptom relief and preventing the cycle of its probably adverse effects on physical activity, work productivity, sexual fulfilment, and mood.
...
PMID:Pain recurrence: a quality of life issue in endometriosis. 852 72
The aim of the study was to report our results of sacral nerve stimulation in patients with
pelvic pain
after failed conservative treatment. From 1992 to August 1998 we treated 111 patients (40 males, 71 females, ages 46 +/- 16 years) with chronic
pelvic pain
. All patients with causal treatment were excluded from this study. Pelvic floor training, transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) and intrarectal or intravaginal electrostimulation were applied and sacral nerve stimulation was used for therapy-resistant pain. The outcome of conservative treatment and sacral nerve stimulation (VAS <3/10; >50% pain relief) was related to symptoms of voiding dysfunction and
dyschezia
, and urodynamic proof of dysfunctional voiding, not to the pain localization or treatment modality. Outcome was inversely related to neuropathic pain. When conservative treatment failed, a test stimulation of the S3 root was effective in 16/26 patients, and 11 patients were implanted successfully with a follow-up of 36 +/- 8 months. So far no late failures have been seen. A longer test stimulation is needed in patients with
pelvic pain
because of a higher incidence of initial false positive tests. Our conclusion is that sacral nerve stimulation is effective in the treatment of therapy-resistant
pelvic pain
syndromes linked to pelvic floor dysfunction.
...
PMID:The pain cycle: implications for the diagnosis and treatment of pelvic pain syndromes. 1129 36
The relationship between chronic
pelvic pain
symptoms and endometriosis is unclear because painful symptoms are frequent in women without this pathology, and because asymptomatic forms of endometriosis exist. Our comprehensive review attempts to clarify the links between the characteristics of lesions and the semiology of chronic
pelvic pain
symptoms. Based on randomized trials against placebo, endometriosis appears to be responsible for chronic
pelvic pain
symptoms in more than half of confirmed cases. A causal association between severe dysmenorrhoea and endometriosis is very probable. This association is independent of the macroscopic type of the lesions or their anatomical locations and may be related to recurrent cyclic micro-bleeding in the implants. Endometriosis-related adhesions may also cause severe dysmenorrhoea. There are histological and physiopathological arguments for the responsibility of deeply infiltrating endometriosis (DIE) in severe chronic
pelvic pain
symptoms. DIE-related pain may be in relation with compression or infiltration of nerves in the sub-peritoneal pelvic space by the implants. The painful symptoms caused by DIE present particular characteristics, being specific to involvement of precise anatomical locations (severe deep dyspareunia,
painful defecation
) or organs (functional urinary tract signs, bowel signs). They can thus be described as location indicating pain. A precise semiological analysis of the chronic
pelvic pain
symptoms characteristics is useful for the diagnosis and therapeutic management of endometriosis in a context of pain.
...
PMID:Endometriosis and pelvic pain: epidemiological evidence of the relationship and implications. 1912 98
The surgical treatment of endometriotic nodules in the recto vaginal septum is aimed at removing the deeply infiltrating fibro muscular and abnormal glandular tissue, in order to relieve
pelvic pain
. The laparoscopic approach to the recto vaginal septum is difficult and potentially dangerous. We describe a new mode of access using a combination of laparoscopy and colposcopy. A 20-year-old woman presented with dyspareunia and
dyschezia
. Vaginal examination revealed a tender nodule, measuring 1.5 <FONT FACE="MetaPress 5">2</FONT> 2 cm, in the posterior vagina wall. The endometriotic deposit was positioned at the top of the recto vaginal septum, extending into the posterior vaginal fornix. An air-contrast barium enema and vaginogran (lateral view) excluded a lesion that had penetrated the full thickness of the rectal wall. We carried out colposcopic CO<SUB>2</SUB> laser ablation of the nodule under laparoscopic control. 'Chocolate fluid' spilled from the lesion and the entire nodule was vaporised until normal tissue was reached. The patient was reviewed 3 and 6 months following the operation, and her symptoms had resolved. The colposcope allows an approach into an area of the pelvis that is usually difficult to access.
...
PMID:A colposcopic approach to an endometriotic nodule in the recto vaginal septum under laparoscopic control. 1675 34
Deep endometriosis is a disease which may involve all organs of the pelvis. The lesion is most often located at the backside of the uterus, involving the uterosacral ligaments and/or the rectovaginal septum. The involvement of adjacent organs, e.g. bowel, ureter, and bladder, makes an interdisciplinary approach necessary. There is a correlation between the radicalness of endometriosis resection and the postoperative improvement of complaints. In a series of 202 patients with deep endometriosis including the bowel we performed a segmental resection with anterior anastomosis including radical excision of all endometriotic lesions. The follow-up of 142 patients shows a significant improvement of
pelvic pain
(96%),
dyschezia
(88%), and dyspareunia (87%). Of 95 patients with a desire for children, 50% became pregnant. The postoperative complication rate was low. A leakage of anastomosis was seen in six cases (3%).
...
PMID:Deep endometriosis, including intestinal involvement--the interdisciplinary approach. 1675 58
No symptom is pathognomonic for endometriosis. Main symptoms are pain (chronic
pelvic pain
, dysmenorrhea, deep dyspareunia,
pain on defecation
, cyclic pain) and infertility (grade C). There is no relation between rAFS endometriosis classification and symptoms intensity and frequency (grade B). Endometriosic lesions location and symptoms type are related to each other as well as symptoms intensity and lesions deepness or adhesion numbers (grade B). Clinical evidence is the same for infertile endometriosic women (grade C). Screening for depression is required among patients suffering from chronic endometriosic
pelvic pain
(grade C). Clinical examination includes: 1) retrocervix area inspection as well as upper part of posterior vaginal wall in search for typical bluish lesions (grade B); 2) vaginal examination in search for: a) uterosacral ligaments nodules (grade B); b) pain in uterosacral ligaments extension (grade B); 3) re-examination during menstruation increases its performance (grade B). No biological check-up in endometriosis diagnosis is necessary (grade A). CA 125 increase is related to: endometriomas and deep lesions volume (grade B), surgically treated infertile women prognosis (grade B). Presurgical endometriosis diagnosis is bettered by using diagnosis pattern in selected population (grade B). Rating scales are recommended in diagnosis and therapeutic follow up (grade B). Quality of life scales are useful to evaluate therapeutic efficiency (grade B).
...
PMID:[Management of endometriosis: clinical and biological assessment]. 1727 15
Intestinal endometriosis accounts for 8-12% of all endometriosis and rectal involvement is most often encountered in the context of deep pelvic infiltration. Intestinal symptoms, often nonspecific, are most typically seen as
painful defecation
or constipation worsening in the premenstrual period associated with
pelvic pain
, dysmenorrheal, dyspareunia, and infertility. Physical examination should include a pelvic exam under anesthesia. Endorectal ultrasound best evaluates rectal muscle invasion, while pelvic MRI and CT will evaluate the full extent of pelvic involvement and other GI sites of implantation. Only radical extirpative surgery of all intestinal, urologic, deep pelvic, and adnexal sites of endometriosis will permit relief of pain, prevent recurrence, and hopefully preserve fertility. In view of the frequency of extra-intestinal sites of involvement and technical difficulties augmented by previous surgical interventions, open laparotomy remains the preferred approach. A laparascopic approach would be reserved only for well-selected patients presenting with isolated colorectal involvement.
...
PMID:[Surgical treatment of rectal endometriosis]. 1736 54
Endometriosis is the presence of endometrial glands and stroma outside the endometrial cavity and is the most common known cause of
pelvic pain
. The number of women being diagnosed with the disease is increasing, but this may be reflective of improved diagnostic techniques. The aetiology is unknown, although the theory of retrograde menstruation remains dominant. Although pain around menstruation is the most frequently experienced symptom, dyspareunia,
dyschezia
, cyclical dysuria and extreme fatigue are all common. The 'gold standard' diagnostic technique is laparoscopic visualization, and the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (2006) recommends that surgical removal of all endometriotic lesions is the ideal. The experience of endometriosis can negatively affect all aspects of a woman's life and relationships, and this is consistently reported in research studies. This article discusses the aetiology and clinical aspects of endometriosis as well as giving an overview of empirical literature surrounding the experience of the disease. It provides nurses with the knowledge to be alert to the possibility of endometriosis as a diagnosis in women with a certain set of symptoms, in whatever healthcare setting they work.
...
PMID:A clinical overview of endometriosis: a misunderstood disease. 1807 80
The relationship between chronic
pelvic pain
symptoms and endometriosis is unclear because painful symptoms are frequent in women without this pathology, and because asymptomatic forms of endometriosis exist. Our comprehensive review attempts to clarify the links between the characteristics of lesions and the semiology of chronic
pelvic pain
symptoms. Based on randomized trials against placebo, endometriosis appears to be responsible for chronic
pelvic pain
symptoms in more than half of confirmed cases. A causal association between severe dysmenorrhoea and endometriosis is very probable. This association is independent of the macroscopic type of the lesions or their anatomical locations and may be related to recurrent cyclic microbleeding in the implants. Endometriosis-related adhesions may also cause severe dysmenorrhoea. There are histological and physiopathological arguments for the responsibility of deeply infiltrating endometriosis (DIE) in severe chronic
pelvic pain
symptoms. DIE-related pain may be in relation with compression or infiltration of nerves in the subperitoneal pelvic space by the implants. The painful symptoms caused by DIE present particular characteristics, being specific to involvement of precise anatomical locations (severe deep dyspareunia,
painful defecation
) or organs (functional urinary tract signs, bowel signs). They can thus be described as "location indicating pain". A precise semiological analysis of the chronic
pelvic pain
symptoms characteristics is useful for the diagnosis and therapeutic.
...
PMID:[Endometriosis and pelvic pain: epidemiological evidence of the relationship and implications]. 1617 13
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