The use of pelvic ultrasonography in the evaluation of adolescents with pelvic inflammatory disease
N. Golden, H. Cohen, G. Gennari and S. Neuhoff
Department of Pediatrics, Brookdale Hospital Medical Center, Brooklyn, NY 11212.
To evaluate the use of pelvic ultrasonography in the diagnosis and
management of female adolescents with pelvic inflammatory disease (PID),
sonograms of 60 patients with PID were compared with those of 40
age-matched controls. Sonograms were evaluated for adnexal volume, adnexal
adherence, uterine size, and the presence of cul-de-sac fluid. Eleven
(19.3%) of the 57 patients with PID, in whom adequate sonograms were
obtained, had tubo-ovarian abscesses; in seven of these patients, the
abscesses were diagnosed ultrasonographically before suspected clinically.
Even in those patients without tubo-ovarian abscesses, the mean (+/- SD)
adnexal volume in the PID group was significantly larger than that of the
control group (11.0 +/- 6.8 cm3 vs 5.2 +/- 2.7 cm,3 respectively). Adnexal
adherence, uterine size, and the presence of cul-de-sac fluid were not
useful in differentiating patients with PID from normal controls. Pelvic
ultrasonography can be a useful adjunct in the diagnosis and management of
PID in adolescents and may, in some instances, provide diagnoses in the
absence of clinical findings.