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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
577 laparoscopic examinations were performed in women presenting with sterility, chronic abdominal pain, primary or secondary amenorrhea, and irregular menstrual periods. 125 cases of chronic
pelvic inflammatory disease
(
PID
) of both the tuberculous and nonspecific varieties were detected through this procedure. 59 of the 125 cases were diagnosed as tuberculous. Investigations prior to laparoscopy had yielded significant results in only 12 cases. 87 of the 125 cases had no abnormal clinical findings, and only 18 of the 37 tubo-ovarian masses were diagnosed by bimanual examination. These results indicate that laparoscopy is an invaluable tool for the diagnosis of
PID
. It can reveal peritubal adhesions, tubercles on the tubes, small tubo-ovarian masses, and hydrosalpinx cases that cannot be detected clinically. It is considered a more suitable tool than culdoscopy, which less frequently notes adhesions to the fallopian tubes and pathological conditions in the upper pelvis. Laparoscopy can play an especially valuable role in India as a prelude to tuboplasty, given the high incidence of pelvic tuberculosis. Of the 316 cases of primary sterility examined in this study, 51 had genital tuberculosis and 39 had nonspecific
PID
. Laparoscopy can also be useful in disproving cases wrongly labelled as chronic pelvic disease. 15 women in this study who reported chronic lower abdominal pain had normal findings, and only 13 cases of
PID
were confirmed among the 33 cases preoperatively diagnosed as
PID
. A significant number of
PID
cases are attributed to operative procedures such as hysterosalpingography and ventrisuspension that are repeated unnecessarily and without proper
sepsis
. Thus, the possibility of a flare-up of infection during laparoscopy, especially due to hydroperturbation, should be considered. Women in this study who were found to have
PID
were given postoperative antibiotics. No significant postoperative complications were observed.
...
PMID:Place of laparoscopy in pelvic inflammatory disease. 1233 15
Some 250 million cases of sexually transmitted disease (STD) occur each year, and in some countries 1 or even 2 women in every 10 are infected with an STD. STDs are likely to reach an advanced stage before women notice them. The consequences of STDs are devastating, according to a report by the Population Information Program of the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, and they include stillbirths, blinding eye infections in the newborn, chronic female abdominal pain, ectopic pregnancy, and infertility. There are social consequences for women such as divorce, and husbands may abandon infertile wives. Gonorrhea and chlamydia can cause both severe inflammation of the pelvis with acute pain and possible infertility.
Pelvic inflammatory disease
can permanently scar the fallopian tubes, increasing the risk of ectopic pregnancy, which can be fatal when the fallopian tube ruptures. Babies born to mothers with gonorrhea and chlamydia are likely to develop eye infections that may make them blind. Chlamydia infection in pregnant women may also cause premature rupture of the membranes,
sepsis
, and the death of premature neonate. Infection may spread to the lungs of newborns, leading to chlamydial pneumonia. Syphilis can cause spontaneous abortion, stillbirth, neonatal death, or congenital syphilis in the infant. Trichomoniasis and herpes can also be transmitted from mother to fetus. And infection with an STD increases the risk of infection with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends that prenatal care should always include checks for STDs. A WHO Technical Working Group on Care of Mother and Baby has stressed the importance of detecting and treating STDs in pregnant women. The working group urged training of health workers to distinguish between STDs and other infections. The group, which met July 5-9, 1993, outlined health center strategies for prevention and treatment.
...
PMID:STDs infect 250 million a year. 1234
Pelvic inflammatory disease
affects approximately 1 million women per year in the United States alone and has a variety of causative organisms. Because the diagnosis of
PID
is based on clinical judgment, health care providers need to be guided by the CDC recommendations for diagnosing and treating
PID
. Because presenting symptoms are often vague, the health care provider should assess female patients for risky behaviors that may lead to
PID
and should use screening data when making clinical judgments and differential diagnoses. Whenever possible, female patients with
PID
should be treated as outpatients. If diagnosis and treatment are not performed in a timely manner,
PID
may cause
sepsis
, septic shock, and even death. Even if they survive, as many as 15% to 20% of these women experience long-term sequelae of
PID
, such as ectopic pregnancy, tubo-ovarian abscess, infertility, dyspareunia, and chronic pelvic pain. The best treatments for
PID
are interventions that lead to prevention and early detection. The critical care nurse has an important role in recognizing the variables that may lead to
PID
-related
sepsis
and in encouraging health-seeking and health-maintenance behaviors among women with these diagnoses.
...
PMID:Pelvic inflammatory disease and sepsis. 1259 41
Female genital mutilations, as well as forcible childhood marriage and their correlate adolescent pregnancies are traditional practices which, not only violate the dignity, but also jeopardize the health, and even the life, of women and their children. The complications of genital mutilations are frequent for a number of reasons: the fact that the clitoris is highly vascularized, the nature of the mutilations, excision or infibulation, and the poor conditions of hygiene. The short term complications are pain, hemorrhage, shock, and urinary retention. Medium term complications include gangrene,
septicemia
, tetanus,
pelvic inflammatory disease
, HIV/AIDS, and hepatitis B or C infections. Serious sequelae may occur, including infertility and gynecologic disorders, and sexual life is invariably altered. The main obstetrical complications of genital mutilations are genital lacerations involving the labia minor and the perineum, which can lead to hemorrhage and sequelae such as urinary or anal incontinence, recto-vaginal and vesico-vaginal fistulas. The role of doctors, which is delicate because these customs are entrenched, is to detect genital mutilations, repair them and prevent them, by participating in health education programs. The consequences of forcible childhood marriage are serious, besides the fact that this is a disguised form of rape. The obstetrical risks favored by the underdevelopment of the uterus and the pelvis, include uterine rupture, preeclampsia and eclampsia, and obstetrical hemorrhage. The fetus/neonate are jeopardized by these complications, which can result in perinatal asphyxia and death, as well as the high rates of intrauterine growth retardation and preterm delivery. The impact of genital mutilations on delivery are compounded in childhood pregnancies for anatomical reasons, but also because these adolescents or children are extremely vulnerable and have poor access to perinatal care. In France, as well as in Africa, non-governmental and women's rights organizations are active in preventing these practices. We strongly recommend that these groups should receive aid and encouragement.
...
PMID:[Female genital mutilations, forced marriages, and early pregnancies]. 1497 67
Recent advances in immunologic techniques have lead to increased recognition of primary immunodeficiencies. A review of patients with suspected immunodeficiencies in a Taiwan tertiary hospital from January 1985 to October 2004 and molecular/genetic analyses done on some patients were investigated. Of the 403 patients selected based on the International Classification of Disease, Ninth Revision, 37 patients with
PID
(8 females and 29 males) were identified: 17 (46%) with antibody production deficiencies, nine (24%) with defective phagocyte function, four (11%) with combined B and T cell immunodeficiencies, seven (19%) with T cell deficiencies, but none with primary complement deficiencies. Those with secondary immunodeficiencies were excluded from the study. Recurrent sinopulmonary infections (62%) were the most common clinical manifestation, followed by
sepsis
(57%), severe skin infection (40%), splenomegaly/hepatomegaly (27%), central nervous system dysfunction (22%), chronic diarrhea (22%), and failure to thrive (19%). Seven (19%) patients died, five of infections, one of disseminated intravascular coagulopathy and one of hepatocellular carcinoma. Six novel mutations were found from 11 agreed patients. This is the first report on primary immunodeficiencies in Taiwan covering a 20-year period.
...
PMID:Distribution and clinical aspects of primary immunodeficiencies in a Taiwan pediatric tertiary hospital during a 20-year period. 1582 93
Ectopic pregnancy still remains a leading cause of maternal mortality and morbidity in the first trimester of pregnancy and also a significant cause of reproductive failure in Nigeria. A descriptive review of 211 consecutive cases of ectopic gestation over an 11-year period was undertaken. Ectopic pregnancy constituted 9.5% of gynaecological admissions. In all, 86% were nulliparous and 62.6% were married. Abdominal pain and tenderness were the most consistent modes of presentation. Also, 95.3% presented as ruptured ectopic pregnancy. Induced abortion (72%) was the most common factor associated with ectopic pregnancy. Anaemia was the most common post-operative complication. In all, 21% had prior dilatation and curettage as a result of misdiagnoses. The case fatality rate was 2.5%. Ectopic pregnancy presents a major public health challenge among women of reproductive age in this region. Community-based comprehensive health education programme focusing on contraception, sex education, prevention and treatment of postabortal
sepsis
,
pelvic inflammatory disease
and puerperal sepsis are urgently needed.
...
PMID:Ectopic pregnancy: an 11-year review in a tertiary centre in the Niger Delta. 1610 50
In Africa, infertility constitutes a major gynaecological complaint and causes enormous socio-psychological stress to the patients. This study examined retrospective data at the University of Benin Teaching Hospital, Benin City, Nigeria, over a 5-year period to determine the factors associated with tubal infertility. Tubal infertility was confirmed in 13.5% of the 1181 new cases of infertility over the study period. The mean age of the patients was 33.2+/-9.5 years. Over 65% were nulliparous and all socioeconomic classes were affected. Major associated factors included infections such as post-abortal
sepsis
, puerperal sepsis and
pelvic inflammatory disease
(
PID
). Infertility is largely preventable. Attention should be focused on reducing the incidence of unsafe abortion and its consequences, providing clean and safe delivery as well as reducing the incidence of and ensuring proper treatment of any cases of
PID
. Infertility is largely preventable. Attention should be focused on reducing the incidence of unsafe abortion and its consequences, providing clean and safe delivery as well as reducing the incidence of and ensuring proper treatment of any cases of
PID
.
...
PMID:Tubal factor infertility in Benin City, Nigeria - sociodemographics of patients and aetiopathogenic factors. 1754 89
Ovarian vein thrombosis (OVT) is a rare cause of abdominal pain that may mimic a surgical abdomen. The differential diagnosis of OVT includes acute appendicitis, endometritis,
pelvic inflammatory disease
, pyelonephritis, nephrolithiasis, tubo-ovarian abscess, and ovarian torsion. The complications of OVT, including
sepsis
and pulmonary embolism, are significant. Diagnosis relies on a careful examination of the radiographic findings. This diagnosis should be considered not only in postpartum patients but also in women with
pelvic inflammatory disease
, recent abdominal surgery, malignancy, or known hypercoagulable state. In this report we present a case of OVT in a 29-year-old woman presenting with 3 days of sharp left-sided abdominal pain, nausea, and vomiting after bilateral salpingectomy. We then discuss the epidemiology, pathophysiology, and clinical management of OVT.
...
PMID:Ovarian vein thrombosis: a rare cause of abdominal pain outside the peripartum period. 1819 26
Sepsis
and/or acute blood loss can be encoutered as an emergency condition in gynaecology, especially in women with ectopic pregnancy/miscarriage, acute
pelvic inflammatory disease
(
PID
)/tuboovarian abscesses, post-puerperal sepsis/haemorrhage and even in postoperative scenarios. If underestimated or suboptimally treated, both can lead to an inadequate tissue perfusion (defined as shock) and the development of multi-organ failure. Morbidity and mortality after development of one of the shock syndromes (septic or haemorrhagic) correlates directly with the duration and severity of the malperfusion. The patient's prognosis depends on a prompt diagnosis of the presence of shock and immediate resuscitation to predefined physiological end-points, often before the cause of the shock has been identified. In septic shock, hypotension is primarily treated with fluid administration and eventually vasopressors, if required, in order to improve the circulation. Timely administration of antibiotics, control of infectious foci, appropriate use of corticoids and recombinant human activated protein C, tight glucose control, prophylaxis of deep vein thrombosis and stress ulcer prevention complete the therapy of septic shock. In haemorrhagic shock, the treatment primarily involves controlling haemorrhage, reversal of possible coagulopathy and administration of sufficient volumes of fluids and blood products to restore normal tissue perfusion.
...
PMID:Urgent care in gynaecology: resuscitation and management of sepsis and acute blood loss. 1959 11
Sepsis
in pregnancy and the puerperium remains a significant cause of maternal mortality and morbidity worldwide. Major morbidity arising as a result of obstetric
sepsis
includes fetal demise, organ failure, chronic
pelvic inflammatory disease
, chronic pelvic pain, bilateral tubal occlusion and infertility. Early recognition and timely response are key to ensuring good outcome. This review examines the clinical problem of
sepsis
in obstetrics and the role of the anaesthetist in the management of this condition.
...
PMID:Sepsis in obstetrics and the role of the anaesthetist. 2216 72
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