0521779407-17 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:18
1146 Pelvic Inflammatory Disease
■Epidemiology of PID complicated by imprecise terminology, lack
of well-defined diagnostic criteria, inconsistent disease reporting
requirements, frequency of asymptomatic infection, reliance on cer-
vical rather than upper genital tract cultures, and polymicrobial
nature of PID
Signs & Symptoms
■10–20% of women with gonorrhea (GC) or chlamydia (CT) infections
of the lower genital tract progress to PID
■Subclinical PID occurs in 60% (commonly caused by CT); mild to
moderate in 30–40%; severe in <5%
■Symptoms: lower abdominal pain, vaginal discharge, vaginal bleed-
ing, dysuria, dyspareunia, nausea or vomiting, anorectal symptoms
■Signs: fever, mucopurulent cervical discharge, cervical motion ten-
derness, uterine and adenexal tenderness, adenexal fullness or mass,
abdominal guarding or rebound tenderness; elevated WBC count,
ESR, C-reactive protein (CRP)
tests
Basic Tests: Blood
■WBC count: elevation particularly associated with GC PID
■ESR≥15 mm/hr; elevated C-reactive protein (CRP)
Basic Tests: Other
■Urinalysis: pyuria, hematuria with urethral GC or CT infection
■Vaginal wet mount:≥3 WBC/hpf, sensitive but not specific
Specific Diagnostic Tests
■Gram’s stained endocervical specimen: Positive for GC=intracel-
lular gram negative diplococci within leukocytes,≥10 WBC/hpf
■Non-culture assays for GC and CT: EIA, DFA, DNA probe, nucleic
acid amplification (LCR, PCR)
■Cervical culture for GC or CT; GC/CT co-infection in 20–30%
■Upper genital tract culture: may be positive for GC, CT, and vaginal
flora including anaerobes
■Endometrial biopsy: histologic evidence of endometritis=intraep-
ithelial polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) and plasma cells;
sensitivity 92% and specificity 87% but may be lower depending on
sampling
■Laparoscopy: “gold standard” but impractical for routine diagnosis;
abnormalities include tubal erythema, swelling, exudate