Pelvic inflammatory disease: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 23:10, 10 August 2011

Background

  • Commonly begins as cervical infection (cervicitis) with gonorrhea or chlamydia

Diagnosis

  1. Pelvic pain (90%)
  2. Constitutional sx-Vaginal discharge (75%)
  3. Abnl pelvic exam (60%)
  4. Vaginal bleeding (40%)

CDC Treatment Criteria

  1. Cervical motion tenderness (CMT) OR
  2. Uterine tenderness OR
  3. Adnexal tenderness
  4. Additional criteria that make the dx more likely:
    1. Fever
    2. WBC >10k
    3. Mucopurulent cervical or vaginal discharge
    4. WBCs on wet mount
    5. Proven infection w/ GC or chlamydia

^CDC Criteria are Sn, but not Sp (i.e. many intra-abominal processes have CMT)

Work-Up

  1. Upreg (negative)
  2. Pelvic exam (send GC/Chlamy, wet mount)
  3. Pelvic US if toxic (r/o TOA)
  4. R/O other intra-abd pathology (consider CT, UA, labs)

Treatment

  • Tx all partners that had sex w/ pt during previous 60d prior to onset of symptoms

Outpatient

  1. CTX 250mg IM x1 + doxycycline 100mg PO BID x14d +/- metronidazole 500mg PO BID x14d
    1. Metronidazole based upon assessment of risk for anaerobes; consider in:
      1. Pelvic abscess
      2. Proven or suspected infection w/ trichomonas or bacterial vaginosis
      3. History of gynecological instrumentation in the preceding 2-3wks

Inpatient

  1. (Cefotetan 2gm IV q12h OR cefoxitin 2mg IV q6h) + doxycycline 100mg IV/PO q12h OR
  2. Clindamycin 900mg IV q8h + genamicin 2mg/kg QD OR
  3. Ampicillin/sulbactam 3gm IV q6hr + doxycycline 100mg IV/PO q12hr

Disposition

Admit for:

  1. TOA, Fitz-Hugh-Curtis
  2. Sepsis/peritonitis
  3. Unable to tol POs
  4. Failed outpt Rx

Complications

  1. TOA/sepsis
  2. Infertility
  3. Ectopic Pregnancy
  4. Chronic pelvic pain

See Also

Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STD) Ectopic Pregnancy Pelvic Pain

Source

CDC 2010, KajiQuestions