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Query: UMLS:C0030794 (
pelvic pain
)
4,056
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Use of preoperative
gonadotropin-releasing hormone
(GnRH) agonists may be beneficial in the case of laparoscopic surgery for large endometriomas. Further studies are necessary to confirm the claim that preoperative GnRH agonists facilitate laparoscopic surgery for endometriosis. Use of GnRH agonists after laparoscopic treatment of endometriosis has beneficial effects in preventing the recurrence of
pelvic pain
associated with endometriosis.
...
PMID:Combined treatment of endometriosis. GnRH agonists and laparoscopic surgery. 956 67
The
gonadotropin-releasing hormone
(GnRH) agonists are a relatively new class of drugs that are potentially effective in treating disorders that are aggravated either by estrogen or testosterone. GnRH agonists are effective in the treatment of endometriosis, as well as other disorders, such as advanced prostrate cancer, precocious puberty and uterine leiomyomata. While the GnRH agonists reduce the extent of the endometrial lesions and the occurrence of
pelvic pain
associated with endometriosis, these agents are associated with physical and psychiatric side effects. The adverse effects of these agents are consistent with the physiological effects of ovarian suppression, such as vasomotor instability, vaginal dryness, and headaches. Preliminary results of a prospective, double-blind placebo-controlled study and an open label trial indicates that depressive mood symptoms increase in women treated with GnRH agonist therapy for endometriosis. Additional evidence suggest that sertraline effectively manages depressive mood symptoms associated with GnRH agonist therapy. The reason for the decline in mood on GnRH agonists is postulated to be associated with the decline in estrogen levels. Effective treatment strategies for depressive mood symptoms in women on GnRH agonists therapy may offer insight into the mechanisms of action of estrogen on mood.
...
PMID:Depressive symptoms associated with gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonists. 970 54
Adenomyosis is a frequent pathology of the uterus for women over 40. Difficult to diagnose, adenomyosis can be responsible of
pelvic pain
and menorrhagia. Association with infertility is a rare event and the responsibility of adenomyosis is difficult to prove. A medical treatment with
LHRH
agonist can be propose to improve fertility in case of patent adenomyosis.
...
PMID:[Adenomyosis and fertility]. 981 Jan 41
Treatment of endometriosis with
gonadotropin-releasing hormone
agonists (GnRHa) is limited to 6 months because of possible adverse effects on bone metabolism. We designed a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, prospective study of 27 patients with endometriosis who were given GnRHa with or without hormone add-back therapy (+ 20 microg of ethinyl estradiol with 0.15 mg desogestrel) designed to suppress the adverse effects of hypoestrogenism while preserving the efficacy of GnRHa. Both regimens showed significant improvements in endometriosis, dysmenorrhea, and
pelvic pain
; effects were significantly better in the GnRHa + placebo group. The GnRHa + placebo group had significantly higher serum calcium levels and a significantly higher loss of lumbar spine bone mineral density (BMD). Urinary levels of pyridinium crosslinks increased significantly in the GnRHa + placebo group, and declined to normal in the GnRHa + add-back group. The add-back therapy protects women taking GnRHas from severe loss of BMD and accelerated bone collagen resorption, but reduces the efficacy of the GnRHa.
...
PMID:Effects of add-back therapy on bone mineral density and pyridinium crosslinks in patients with endometriosis treated with gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonists. 985 90
Chronic pelvic pain is a condition that affects one in seven women of reproductive age in the United States. Direct and indirect medical costs associated with this condition are estimated to be more than $3 billion annually before factoring in the costs of diagnostic testing. At many medical centers, endometriosis is the most common single cause of chronic
pelvic pain
; other causes include intra-abdominal adhesions, chronic pelvic inflammatory disease, ovarian cysts, and adenomyosis. The current approach to diagnosis and treatment of chronic
pelvic pain
is a two-step approach, with medical history, physical examination, laboratory testing, and empiric therapy (nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, oral contraceptives, and/or antibiotics) comprising Step 1 and surgical diagnosis with laparoscopy as Step 2. At many centers, the most common diagnosis at the time of laparoscopy for chronic
pelvic pain
is endometriosis, typically minimal to mild disease that can be effectively treated with hormonal therapy. Therefore, a rational alternative approach is a 3-month empiric course of therapy with a
gonadotropin-releasing hormone
agonist before laparoscopy. The advantages of this approach are the high rate of pain relief in women, the possibility of avoiding an invasive procedure (laparoscopy), the ability to extend therapy, if pain is relieved, to the full 6-month therapeutic course of endometriosis, and a potentially lower cost relative to laparoscopy.
...
PMID:Primary gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist therapy for suspected endometriosis: a nonsurgical approach to the diagnosis and treatment of chronic pelvic pain. 1016 63
Endometriosis is a common gynecologic disease among women of reproductive age. The lesions of early endometriosis may be missed during laparoscopy, which has been considered to be the definitive means of both diagnosis and treatment. Moreover, laparoscopic treatment of minimal-to-mild (stage 1 to 2) endometriosis does not always resolve associated chronic
pelvic pain
in many women. Instead, medical therapy with
gonadotropin-releasing hormone
(GnRH) agonists may be more effective in providing long-lasting pain relief in patients with similar disease stages. The author outlines the cost effectiveness of a trial course of GnRH agonists in women presenting with chronic
pelvic pain
.
...
PMID:An economically rational method of managing early-stage endometriosis. 1017 46
Although laparoscopy has been considered the gold standard for the diagnosis of endometriosis, it often fails to detect the disease and provide lasting pain relief. Motivated by concerns for patient well-being, treatment efficacy, and cost containment, Lovelace Health Systems of Albuquerque, New Mexico, turned to the Lovelace Chronic
Pelvic Pain
Protocol, based on a chronic
pelvic pain
algorithm used to identify potential candidates for therapy with
gonadotropin-releasing hormone
agonist (GnRH agonist). Since the protocol's introduction in January 1997, empiric therapy with GnRH agonist has proved beneficial to patients, physicians, and healthcare system budgets.
...
PMID:Evaluation of Lovelace Health Systems chronic pelvic pain protocol. 1053 63
A 78-year-old man admitted with clinical jaundice and
pelvic pain
had a total bilirubin level of 6.56 mg/dL, an alkaline phosphatase level of 855 U/L, and a prostate specific antigen (PSA) level of 9996 ng/mL. A computed tomogram demonstrated marked retroperitoneal, peripancreatic, periceliac, and periaortic lymphadenopathy. A bone scan revealed increased radiolabeled technetium uptake in the pelvis, vertebral column, parietooccipital region, ribs, and appendiceal skeleton. A biopsy of one pelvic lesion revealed metastatic prostate cancer. This man's obstructive jaundice and bone pain had a dramatic response to treatment with a
gonadotropin-releasing hormone
analog (leupro lide) and antiandrogen (bicalutamide). All bone pair and clinical signs of jaundice disappeared in 1 week His total bilirubin decreased to 0.84 mg/dL by 2 weeks His PSA values reflected this clinical response, decreasing to 4022 ng/mL in 1 week, 2680 ng/dL after 2 weeks and 1028 ng/mL after 1 month of the above therapy.
...
PMID:Metastatic prostate cancer (with prostate-specific antigen of 9996) presenting as obstructive jaundice. 1069 97
Leiomyomata represent the most common gynecologic tumors and are responsible for over 200,000 hysterectomies per year. They are almost invariably benign and represent clonal expansion of individual myometrial cells. They can cause a variety of symptoms including menometrorrhagia, dysmenorrhea,
pelvic pain
, reproductive failure, and compression of adjacent pelvic viscera, or be totally asymptomatic. Leiomyomata are more common in African-American women and have a non-Mendelian inheritance pattern with up to a 50% recurrence rate after surgical removal. The therapeutic choices depend on the goals of therapy, with hysterectomy most often used for definitive treatment, and myomectomy when preservation of childbearing is desired. Intracavitary and submucous leiomyomata can be removed by hysteroscopic resection. Laparoscopic myomectomy is now technically possible but apparently with an increased risk of uterine rupture during pregnancy. Although
gonadotropin-releasing hormone
-agonist-induced hypogonadism can reduce the volume of leiomyomata, the severe side effects and prompt recurrences make them useful only for short-term goals such as reversing anemia or shrinking an intracavitary tumor prior to hysteroscopic resection. Nonextirpative approaches such as myolysis and uterine artery embolization are being evaluated, and may provide more options if they prove to be safe and efficacious in long-term follow-up. Ultimately, if the genetic basis for fibroid development and/or the molecular mechanism(s) of myometrial proliferation are understood, additional nonsurgical therapeutic interventions may be forthcoming. Current clinical needs are to a) determine an effective prevention strategy in genetically predisposed individuals; b) slow the growth of leiomyomata; c) identify the mechanisms of infertility; d) improve early detection; e) develop better surgical techniques; f) reduce recurrences after myomectomy; g) develop nonextirpative options; and h) evaluate their long-term results.
...
PMID:Clinical decision making regarding leiomyomata: what we need in the next millenium. 1103 91
Endometriosis is a common condition for which a number of treatments have been proposed. Medical treatments are based on the hormonal responsiveness of endometriosis implants. These therapies include progestins (with or without estrogens), androgens, and
gonadotropin-releasing hormone
(GnRH) analogs. Surgical treatments may include hysterectomy with oophorectomy or organ-sparing surgery involving ablation or resection of visible lesions of endometriosis and restoration of pelvic anatomy. There are no studies that directly compare the effectiveness or adverse effects of medical therapy and surgical therapy. Studies on medical therapy compare different treatments with placebo or with other active treatments. Hormone-based therapies for endometriosis show 80%-100% effectiveness in relief of
pelvic pain
over a 6-month course of therapy. Serious adverse outcomes after medical therapy are unusual. Studies on surgical therapy are largely anecdotal, with noncomparative reports on a variety of surgical methods. A few comparative surgical studies have been reported. Because of the noncomparative nature of many of the surgical studies, the use of combinations of surgical procedures and techniques in the reported studies, and the reporting of results from surgeons with an unusually high level of technical skill, the gynecological practitioner has little basis in the literature for assessing the optimum surgical approach. Surgical complications are believed to be underreported and may be related to how aggressive a surgical procedure is undertaken.
...
PMID:Medical and surgical therapies for pain associated with endometriosis. 1126 98
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