Səhifə 1 dan 66 nəticələr
The authors describe one case of rectal stenosis complicating chronic salpingitis in a patient carrying an intrauterine device. This observation is peculiar in that the inflammatory fibrous reaction is very intense, spreading all over the pelvis and forming a pseudotumoral mass sheathing the rectum.
BACKGROUND
A viable intrauterine pregnancy with salpingitis has been reported rarely.
METHODS
A 27-year-old woman at 10 weeks' gestation developed abdominal pain, fever, leukocytosis, peritoneal signs, closed cervix and a viable pregnancy. Progression from acute salpingitis to septic abortion was
OBJECTIVE
The study of the etiological aspects of acute abdominal pain in children, in order to perceive the clinical-etiological correlations and the disorders distribution related to age, gender and the origin of the patients.
METHODS
The criteria for including patients were age (between 0 and 18
OBJECTIVE
To determine the clinical features and microbial aetiology of acute salpingitis in women attending an inner city teaching hospital.
METHODS
Prospective, longitudinal cohort study.
METHODS
One hundred and forty-seven women presenting consecutively with acute abdominal pain and clinical
110 patients suffering from laparoscopical verified salpingitis and desire for a baby, were treated with tetracycline (oxytetracycline or doxycycline; TC)/metronidazole (n = 67), augmentan (n = 22) or cipropfloxacin/metronidazole (n = 21). After an average period of 11.6 weeks, all patients
OBJECTIVE
To identify sensitive and specific histological criteria for endometritis in women with laparoscopically-confirmed acute salpingitis.
METHODS
Women, age 18-40 years of age presenting with complaints of lower abdominal pain ≤2 weeks and no antibiotics use in past two weeks, were enrolled.
The diagnosis of salpingitis based solely on clinical criteria is inaccurate, with both low specificity and sensitivity. Laparoscopy has therefore become a valuable diagnostic tool in clinical practice and essential in clinical research on salpingitis. Different types of evidence indicate that
A 20-year-old woman presented to the emergency department with a history of lower abdominal pain and recent loss of consciousness. She was admitted with a primary diagnosis of abdominal pain; ectopic pregnancy was ruled out. The culture of the endocervix was positive for Neisseria gonorrhoeae.
23 women with lower abdominal pain and Chlamydia trachomatis in the cervix, urethra, or both sites were studied. Laparoscopy was done with sampling of the endometrium and fallopian tubes for detection of C trachomatis. 11 women had laparoscopic evidence of pelvic inflammatory disease (PID); C
The incidence of acute abdominal pain ranges between 5-10% of all visits at emergency department. Abdominal emergencies of hospital visits may include surgical and non-surgical emergencies. The most common causes of acute abdomen are appendicitis, biliary colic, cholecystitis, diverticulitis, bowel
Acute salpingitis is an uncommon cause of an acute surgical abdomen, especially in an adolescent who is not sexually active. The following is a case of a 12-year-old girl who denied sexual activity, had a remote history of an appendectomy, and a recent diagnosis of a large, right-sided ovarian cyst,
BACKGROUND
Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome or acute perihepatitis is considered a rare complication of pelvic inflammatory disease, mostly associated with chlamydial or gonococcal salpingitis. Peritoneal tuberculosis is a rare site of extra-pulmonary infection caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
Isoniazid (INH) hepatic injury is histologically indistinguishable from viral hepatitis and is related to individual susceptibility of patients who hydrolyze the drug to isonicotinic acid at different rates. We here present a case initially involving a complaint of lower abdominal pain, which was
Acute salpingitis is one of the most common acute gynecologic diseases and occurs in approximately 750,000 women each year in the United States. Use of laparoscopy to confirm the diagnosis of acute salpingitis has shown that the signs and symptoms classically ascribed to this disease are not
OBJECTIVE
To describe a unique case of descending salpingitis and functioning endometrium in a noncavitated mullerian remnant in a patient with Mayer-Rokitansky-Kuster-Hauser (MRKH) syndrome.
METHODS
Case report.
METHODS
Second Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Athens,