OBGYN.net
Conference Coverage
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"Pain in
Endometriosis" Mark Perloe, MD, OBGYN.net Editorial Advisor with Dr. Ray Garry Audio/Video Link *requires RealPlayer - free download |
| Dr. Mark Perloe: "Hi, I’m Dr. Mark Perloe, I’m here in London at the World Endometriosis Society 2000 Meeting. We’re here with Dr. Ray Garry who is a Professor at the University of Teesside/South Cleveland Medical Center in Middlesborough, England. You’ve had an excellent presentation today on the pain and severity of endometriosis. Can you speak about the different types of pain associated with endometriosis?" Professor Ray Garry: "Yes, clearly there are many different areas, the pelvis and the deep whole of the body which can cause pain. We tried to demonstrate in isolated lesions the sort of areas that can be involved. Of course, the most common areas are the uterosacral ligaments, the rectovaginal septum, and the ovary. Obviously very well known but less obviously and less clearly associated with endometriosis in the past, the bowel symptoms and ureteric and bladder symptoms, the diaphragm and even the abdominal wall can all being involved in all these specific types of areas." Dr. Mark Perloe: "Where most physicians are aware that you need to work with obviously the typical lesions and with the advent of the disk and photos that you’ve put together, people are becoming more familiar with the atypical appearing lesions, but quite often that’s really not enough, according to your presentation, to really evaluate the patient who complains of pelvic pain." Professor Ray Garry: "Yes, we believe that many of our patients have the true extensive lesions missed or at least under-diagnosed. If the physician is only concerned for looking for classic variable black spots, the typical lesion, they will miss many, many of the clinically most important lesions. A lot of lesions that occur are white, fibrotic, or even retroperitoneal and it’s important that during his examination with careful palpation behind the uterus of the uterosacral ligaments and vagina, rectovaginal septum, and particularly during laparoscopic evaluation that he test these areas. We have demonstrated a way of doing this by placing a probe in the rectum and in the posterior vaginal fornix and with these two probes it’s possible to delineate many of the lesions that are not obvious at that site." Dr. Mark Perloe: "When nodules are diagnosed, what do you do?" Professor Ray Garry: "I believe these are clearly patent for many of the symptoms. If you grasp on such a nodule, its painful tendencies in the vast majority of patients when they have symptoms, I believe you need to remove those - whether or not they are in surgically convenient spots like the uterosacral ligament where you can resect that easily or surgically very difficult spots such as on the rectum or on the ureter. I believe that there is clear evidence now with the benefit of attempting even quite heroic surgery, and I believe that’s justified by the severity of the symptoms and the impact these symptoms have on the patient’s over all quality of life." Dr. Mark Perloe: "One of the technical aspects of when you’re doing this and you’re putting the probes into the vagina and the rectum, with the sense of palpation, are you doing it yourself or is your assistant doing this?" Professor Ray Garry: "I always do this myself, there is very definitely a sense of feel with the instruments you’re using. Clearly, in laparoscopy, we have the superb visualization, but the one thing we miss is the sense of touch but you can replace most of that by becoming familiar with the movement of the instruments and even the sound the instruments make when they’re going across normal and abnormal tissue." Dr. Mark Perloe: "So your position is doing a procedure for infertility laparoscopy and the patient that has no bowel symptoms or symptoms of pain but there is a plaque of endometriosis on the rectum. What do you advise in that situation?" Professor Ray Garry: "My feeling is that we are to treat the symptoms, basically, this is severe surgery for severe symptoms. If the patient is asymptomatic and coping well with the endometriosis she has, in my opinion, I wouldn’t be keen to do major surgery in these circumstances. The only exception is if their infertility has been compromised by the presence of endometriosis. If she fails with IVF or whatever other treatment she’s having, it may help her to conceive to remove the endometriosis even if it’s not directly affecting the fallopian tubes, but in general terms if there’s no symptoms I wouldn’t perform this surgery." Dr. Mark Perloe: You showed some wonderful pictures of involvement or cul-de-sac obliteration in a significant number of your patients. Do you find that most of those cases where there is stricture of the colon or extensive growth that that’s evident preoperatively with a sigmoidoscopy, is that a part of your pre-op evaluation?" Professor Ray Garry: "The advanced sigmoidoscopy are a very disappointing investigation, we very seldom see, even when the patients are passing blood at the site of placement, that she actually has mucosal lesions that are seen on sigmoidoscopy. We find that very minimal if there’s more obliteration perhaps the most useful investigation is vaginal ultrasound and which we find a number of cases of this spectrum, but to be honest, the physical passage is our definitive test, you get a problem in the rectum where it develops distal nodes." Dr. Mark Perloe: "You’re obviously not doing surgery, are you routinely doing any kind of pre-operative evaluation in the patient who has pain and you suspect bowel involvement?" Professor Ray Garry: "In the patient who has definite bowel symptoms, we would routinely do at the very minimum the vaginal ultrasound and we may do an IVU of the bowel." |