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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

This article reviews current knowledge on the diagnosis, pathogenesis, epidemiology, treatment, and prognosis of pelvic inflammatory disease (PID). Since PID has important implications for future health and fertility, its diagnosis and management are of utmost importance. A recent study of the accuracy of clinical diagnosis of PID indicated that, even when as many as 7 reliable symptoms and signs were present, there was still possibility for diagnostic error. This has led some to advocate diagnostic laparoscopy. In older women, IUD users, and women who have recently delivered or undergone pelvic surgery, endogenous organisms are more likely to be the initial infecting agents. Treatment of PID should be begun before the results of microbiological investigations are available and should cover a wide spectrum of organisms. The author's preference is a combination of penicillin or ampicillin in high dose, gentamicin, and rectal metronidazole. Follow up treatment with tetracycline or erythromycin is needed to eradicate chlamydial infection. The author also prefers to remove an IUD in place once antibiotic cover has been established. The longterm prognosis in such cases is not good, especially after nongonococcal PID. 25% of a group of 415 PID patients followed for 10 years had reinfections and 18% suffered chronic pelvic pain. 21% were involuntarily infertile, and tubal occlusion rates rose from 13% after 1 attack to 75% in those who had been infected 3 or more times. When PID patients did become pregnant, ectopic pregnancy was 6 times more common than in a group of matched controls.
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PMID:Pelvic inflammatory disease. 293 44

An analysis of published studies of the effect of antibiotic prophylaxis associated with vacuum aspiration abortion includes an examination of risk factors for pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), cervical and vaginal flora present in early pregnancy and in PID, the effect of surgical scrub and of prophylaxis on flora, principles of antibiotic prophylaxis, and economic costs of PID. From several prospective studies, it is clear that nulliparas, women with a history of PID, those bearing Chlamydia trachomatis are at risk of post-abortion infection. No risk was associated with pelvic pain, dysmenorrhea, social class, insertion of an IUD, or timing of resumption of coitus. After an extensive enumeration of microbes found in nonpregnant, pregnant, and PID female genital tracts, it was concluded that only C. trachomatis and N. gonorrheae are clearly associated with PID, while the importance of several other microbes is unclear. Quantitative counts of organisms in any condition are lacking. PID is polymicrobial; different organisms probably account for noniatrogenic PID and post-surgical PID. There is evidence that surgical cleansing of the vagina has no bearing on incidence of post-abortal PID, since the responsible organisms come from the endocervix. 5 controlled clinical trials demonstrated that antibiotic prophylaxis is warranted; that penicillin/ampicillin selectively reduced PID in women with PID history; that imidazoles preferentially reduce PID in the general population without PID history. No lasting side effects or emergence of resistant organisms was reported. The treatment was cost effective, cutting health costs and labor losses 5-8%, and reducing the incidence of spontaneous abortion, secondary infertility, and chronic pain.
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PMID:Pelvic inflammatory disease following induced first-trimester abortion. Risk groups, prophylaxis and sequelae. 327 98

After bone marrow aspiration procedure; some complications like pain and bleeding at the puncture site may be expected but some serious complications like osteomyelitis and soft tissue infections may also rarely occur. In this case we present a boy with recurrent fever. During etiologic investigation, familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) gene M694V mutation was +/+. Patient was treated with oral colchicine however fever persisted. The patient was considered as colchicine resistant FMF and steroid treatment was planned. Bone marrow aspiration procedure was executed to rule out malignancy. Three months after bone marrow aspiration, he was readmitted with complaint of left pelvic pain, difficulty in walking without support and standing on his left foot. Radiological imaging demonstrated left iliopsoas abscess and left sacroiliac osteomyelitis. Patient was successfully treated with intravenous ampicillin-sulbactam and clindamycin treatment for 6 weeks. Then oral amoxicillin-clavulanic acid treatment was continued for 2 weeks. Patient was discharged without any surgical procedure. On 1-year follow-up he could walk without any support.
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PMID:Bone marrow aspiration complications: Iliopsoas abscess and sacroiliac osteomyelitis. 2862 Nov 3