Pelvic inflammatory disease is a multiple disease and a common gynecological disease. The harm and impact of pelvic inflammatory disease on patients are also obvious. We must detect, detect, and treat it as soon as possible, especially when cooking in daily life.
Symptoms of pelvic inflammatory disease
1. Menstrual disorders
Early endometrial congestion and ulcers, excessive menstruation. Many patients suffer from long-term illness during medical treatment, resulting in varying degrees of damage to the endometrium and reduced or amenorrhea.
2. Lower abdominal pain
Pelvic inflammation and adhesions, with a certain degree of lower abdominal pain, worsen physiologically.
3. Systemic symptoms
During the activity period, there are general symptoms of tuberculosis such as fever, night sweats, weakness, anorexia, weight loss, and sometimes only fever during physiological period.
4. Infertility
Destruction and adhesion of the fallopian tube mucosa, blockage of the lumen or adhesion around the fallopian tube, and sometimes the lumen remains partially unobstructed. However, mucosal cilia are damaged, the fallopian tubes become stiff, peristalsis is restricted, transportation function is lost, pregnancy is not possible, and most patients are infertile. Genital tuberculosis is usually one of the main causes of primary infertility in patients.
Examination methods for pelvic inflammatory disease
1. B-ultrasound self inspection
Important are B-type or grayscale ultrasound scans and photographs, which are 85% accurate in distinguishing masses or abscesses caused by adhesion of the fallopian tubes, ovaries, and intestines. However, mild or moderate levels of pelvic inflammation are difficult to characterize on B-ultrasound images.
2. Laparoscopic examination
If there is no diffuse peritonitis and the patient's normal environment is still good, laparoscopic examination should be performed in patients with pelvic inflammation or abnormal pelvic inflammation and other acute abdominal diseases. Laparoscopic examination should not only accurately diagnose and identify diagnosis and treatment, but also make open-end decisions about the level of etiology of pelvic inflammation.
3. Pathogen training
The actual source is the same as before. It should be quickly or within 30 seconds inoculated onto the Thayer Martin training medium, and trained in a 35 ℃ incubator for 48 hours to perform bacterial identification through glycolysis. The new rapid chlamydia enzyme assay replaces the traditional chlamydia detection technology, and it is also reliable for mammalian cell training to carry out the antigen test of Chlamydia trachomatis, which is an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. The sensitivity per capita is 89.5%, with 98.4% specificity.
Treatment methods for pelvic inflammatory disease