The Journal of the American Association of Gynecologic Laparoscopists, 9(2), 115-119
Abstract
Objective To determine whether routine clinical examination is sufficient for the diagnosis and establishing the location of deeply infiltrating endometriosis (DIE).
Design Retrospective analysis (Canadian Task Force classification II-2).
Setting University-affiliated hospital. Patients. One hundred sixty women with histologically proved deeply infiltrating endometriosis.
MEASUREMENTS AND
Main Results Speculum examination allowed endometriotic lesions to be viewed in only 14.4% (23) of patients, and a classic, painful, spheric nodule was palpated in only 43.1% (69). Results of routine clinical examination varied significantly with location of DIE. Whereas a nodule was found in 80.0% (24) of patients with vaginal endometriosis, this rate dropped to only 35.3% (6) and 33.3% (34) in those with DIE of the digestive tract and uterosacral ligaments, respectively (p <0.0001).
Conclusion High locations of DIE lesions at the level of uterosacral ligaments, bottom of the pouch of Douglas, and upper one-third of the posterior vaginal wall explain why results of routine clinical examination are so poor. The term "deep endometriosis infiltrating the rectovaginal septum" is generally incorrect in the true anatomic sense.
deeply infiltrating endometriosis clinical examination diagnosis, deep endometriosis pelvic exam sensitivity limitations, rectovaginal septum endometriosis physical examination accuracy, deeply infiltrating endometriosis uterosacral ligament diagnosis, Chapron deeply infiltrating endometriosis clinical examination, speculum palpation nodule deep endometriosis detection, DIE diagnosis routine clinical exam insufficiency, endometriosis digestive tract vaginal clinical detection rate, deep endometriosis location diagnostic accuracy retrospective, deeply infiltrating endometriosis anatomic classification diagnosis
PMID 11960033 11960033 DOI 10.1016/s1074-3804(05)60117-x 10.1016/s1074-3804(05)60117-x
Keywords
Adult, Douglas' Pouch/pathology, Endometriosis/diagnosis/pathology, Female, Humans, Laparoscopy, Ligaments/pathology, Middle Aged, Physical Examination, Retrospective Studies, Vaginal Diseases/diagnosis