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Ob Gyn and Male GU

Ob Gyn and Male GU. William Beaumont Hospital Department of Emergency Medicine. Causes of pelvic pain. Ectopic pregnancy PID Ovarian torsion Ruptured ovarian cyst Fibroids Endometriosis. Pelvic pain case.

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Ob Gyn and Male GU

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  1. Ob Gyn and Male GU William Beaumont Hospital Department of Emergency Medicine

  2. Causes of pelvic pain • Ectopic pregnancy • PID • Ovarian torsion • Ruptured ovarian cyst • Fibroids • Endometriosis

  3. Pelvic pain case 26 y/o F presents with RLQ pain and vaginal spotting. Abdominal and pelvic exams are normal. 26 y/o F presents with RLQ pain, R shoulder pain, no spotting. Pelvic with R adnexal fullness and tenderness. What are you thinking about?

  4. Ectopic pregnancy • Abdominal pain or vaginal bleeding in first trimester pregnancy • 2% incidence • Leading cause of first trimester maternal death • Risk factors – prior PID, failed IUD or tubal ligation, history of infertility, prior ectopic

  5. Signs and symptoms • Duration of the pregnancy • Extent of intraperitoneal hemorrhage • Slow leakage (65% non ruptured) • Frank rupture • Site of implantation • Ampulla – most common • Isthmus – 10% - rupture common • Cornual – massive hemorrhage

  6. Signs and symptoms • Abdominal pain 95% • Abdominal tenderness 70% • Vaginal bleeding – slight spotting • Tenesmus • 3 S’s • Syncope, shoulder pain, shock • Suggests rupture

  7. Diagnosis • Physical exam – not always helpful • High index of suspicion • BhCG – all women with vag bleed or abdominal pain in reproductive yrs • Pelvic ultrasound – Suggestive of ectopic pregnancy • No IUP, BhCG >1200 (DZ) • Complex adnexal mass • Moderate-large amount cul-de-sac fluid

  8. Treatment • Rhogam if Rh negative and bleeding • Gynecology consult for Methotrexate or surgical removal • ABCs

  9. Next case… 18 y/o F presents with low abdominal pain, fever, and last period about one week ago. This is her pelvic. What is this?

  10. PID • Most common cause of pelvic pain • Most common serious infection in reproductive aged women • Cervicitis that ascends to become a polymicrobial endometritis, salpingitis, oophoritis • Risk factors – prior PID, multiple partners, IUD use, instrumentation of uterine cavity

  11. Symptoms • Bilateral lower quadrant pain • Purulent vaginal discharge >50% • Abnormal vaginal bleeding • Symptoms begin shortly after menses

  12. PE • CMT • Bilateral adnexal tenderness • Purulent cervical discharge • Diagnosis – clinical to begin treatment • Gram neg intracellular diplococci • C & S, DNA probe (PCR, run late am)

  13. Indications for admission • Suspected TOA or Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome • Patient unable to tolerate po • Peritonitis, septic appearing • Prepubertal children • Indwelling IUD • Pregnancy • + /- nulliparous women

  14. Inpatient treatment • Cefoxitin 2 g IV q 6 * • Cefotetan 2 g IV q 12 * • Unasyn 3 g IV q 6* • * WITH Doxycycline 100 mg PO/IV q 12 or • Clindamycin 900 mg IV q 8 with Gentamycin alone

  15. Outpatient treatment • Ceftriaxone 250 mg IM PLUS • Cefoxitin 2 gm IM with Probenecid 1 gm po PLUS • Doxycycline 100 mg BID x 14 d • +/-Metronidazole 500 mg BID x 14 d

  16. Cervicitis • Cervical infection – discharge without abdominal pain or constitutional symptoms • Gonorrhea or Chlamydia • Treatment – outpatient • Ceftriaxone 125 mg IM with Doxycycline 100 mg BID x 7 days • Alternatives for GC: Cefixime 400 mg PO x 1 • Alternative for Chlamydia: Azithromycin 1 g PO • Alternative for both: Azithromycin 2 g PO

  17. Flank Pain Case 26 y/o F presents with L flank pain, LLQ pain, and pain that radiates to the vagina. She also has urinary frequency. She has L CVA and LLQ tenderness on exam. What could this be? What was missed?

  18. Ovarian pain • Ruptured cyst • Sudden, severe, sharp unilateral pain • self resolving unless hemorrhagic or dermoid • Treatment – observe in ED • Ovarian torsion • Intermittent colicky pain or acute abdomen • Adnexal fullness/tenderness • BhCG, doppler ultrasound is diagnostic • Treatment – admit via OR

  19. Kidney stones • Common - @ 10% incidence • Flank pain, radiating to groin or abdomen • Writhing in pain, nausea, vomiting • CVA tenderness • GU exam (radiating pain) • Abdomen soft, nontender, BS - ileus

  20. Kidney stones work up • Urinalysis • Hematuria (unless complete obstruction) • Infection = surgical emergency • CT scan (non contrast) abd/pelvis • Ultrasound • IVP • 90% radiopaque – visible on KUB • 75% Calcium 15% struvite (Mg) • Others: uric acid, cystine, drug induced

  21. Helical CT scan • perinephric stranding of fat surrounding the left kidney and proximal left ureter • Left kidney is enlarged, with dilatation of the intrarenal collecting system

  22. Treatment • IV fluids • Strain urine • Analgesics – ketorolac, narcotics • Antiemetics if vomiting • Tamsulosin – Flomax – alpha blocker • < 5mm – usually pass spontaneously • > 8 mm – often require surgery

  23. Admission (Observation) • Intractable pain • Intractable vomiting • Stone > 6mm • Solitary kidney or congenital abnormalities (horseshoe kidney) • Infected stone is a true surgical emergency (perinephric abscess, sepsis and death)

  24. Testicular pain • 18 y/o male c/o of pain in his right testicle that was sudden onset 2 hours ago with nausea and vomiting. It began while he was running. Exam shows a diffusely tender swollen right testicle, with loss of cremasteric reflex. • What are you thinking? • What tests do you want to order?

  25. Male GU • Testicular torsion • Epididymitis • Fourniere’s gangrene

  26. Testicular torsion • Sudden severe testicular or lower abd pain • Often preceded by trauma/physical activity • Most common in pre and pubescent males, but can occur at any age • PE – diffusely tender, swollen testicle • Diagnosis – no flow on testicular ultrasound • Admit via the OR, stat urologic consult

  27. Epididymitis • Gradual pain • Posterior epididymal tenderness and edema (later swollen scrotum obscures) • Usually occurs in sexually active males • U/A – pyuria • Testicular ultrasound – to rule out torsion • Outpatient Abs to cover GC and Chlamydia, analgesics, scrotal support

  28. Fourniere’s gangrene • Elderly or immunocompromised men • Sudden onset of edematous, necrotic scrotum • Patients appear toxic • Plain films – scrotal gangrene and intrascrotal gas • Urologic consult for surgical debridement • IVF, broad spectrum IV antibiotics

  29. Fournier’s Gangrene

  30. THE END ANY QUESTIONS

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