Ureteral endometriosis: a complication of rectovaginal endometriotic (adenomyotic) nodules
- PMID: 11779587
- DOI: 10.1016/s0015-0282(01)02921-1
Ureteral endometriosis: a complication of rectovaginal endometriotic (adenomyotic) nodules
Abstract
Objective: To present data from 18 cases of ureteral endometriosis.
Design: Prospective clinical study.
Setting: Department of gynecology at a university hospital.
Patient(s): Four hundred and five patients with severe dysmenorrhea or deep dyspareunia due to a rectovaginal endometriotic (adenomyotic) nodule.
Intervention(s): Patients were prospectively evaluated using intravenous pyelography. All patients underwent laparoscopic surgery to remove rectovaginal adenomyosis and ureterolysis.
Main outcome measure(s): Presurgical and postsurgical evaluation and histologic analysis.
Result(s): Preoperative intravenous pyelography revealed ureteral stenosis with ureterohydronephrosis in 18 patients (4.4%). A significantly higher prevalence (11.2%) was observed in nodules > or = 3 cm in diameter. Five women (20%) had complete ureteral stenosis. Kidney scintigraphy revealed damaged kidney parenchymal function, which ranged from 18% to 42%. Laparoscopic ureterolysis was done in 16 women; 2 women underwent ureteral resection and uretero-ureterostomy. A significant postoperative decrease in ureterohydronephrosis was noted in all patients; however, renal function improved only slightly.
Conclusion(s): Ureteral endometriosis was found in 4.4% of patients with rectovaginal endometriotic (adenomyotic) nodules. Ureterolysis and removal of associated adenomyotic lesions was sufficient therapy in most patients; two required resection of the ureteral stenotic segment. Intravenous pyelography should be performed in all women with rectovaginal nodules > or = 3 cm to prevent nonreversible loss of renal function.
Comment in
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Laterality associations?Fertil Steril. 2002 Aug;78(2):440-1; author reply 441. doi: 10.1016/s0015-0282(02)03265-x. Fertil Steril. 2002. PMID: 12137899 No abstract available.
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