Background Pelvic congestion syndrome (PCS) is a problematic cause of chronic pelvic pain in women. It is thought to result from venous insufficiency of either ovarian or pelvic veins. Patients also present a variety of symptoms including dysuria and dyspareunia as well as vulva and buttock varicosities. The aim of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of multi-detector CT (MDCT) in diagnosis of PCS. Two hundred patients were included in our study and underwent CT venography of the abdomen and pelvis. Results We performed a prospective comparative study conducted on 200 patients. Thirty patients (15%) were diagnosed as PCS. There were congestion of the ovarian venous plexus and uterine venous engorgement in all patients. Filling of the veins across the midline was noted in 10 patients and filling of the vulval and thigh varicosities was noted in 3 patients. Ten patients had right ovarian vein dilatation; 12 patients had left ovarian vein dilatation; while 8 patients had bilateral ovarian vein dilatation. The right ovarian vein mean diameter (± SD) = 7.1 ± 0.8 mm; while the left ovarian vein mean diameter (± SD) = 7.6 ± 1 mm. Left ovarian venous reflux was found in 6 cases while no pathological reflux depicted on right side. Conclusions CT venography is considered as one of the initial investigations for the diagnosis of PCS in female patients with chronic pelvic pain making the further assessment by ovarian venography is for interventional management of diagnosed cases.
Cobb syndrome is a rare vascular disorder characterized by vascular skin lesions distributed in a dermatomal pattern, with corresponding muscular, osseous, paraspinal, and/or spinal vascular lesions occurring at the same body somite (metamere). We present a case of a 25-year-old man who presented with a history of right upper limb paresthesia followed by bilateral progressive upper and lower limb weakness and heaviness. Physical examination showed large cutaneous port wine stains on the right side of the chest, the nape, and along the whole right upper limb in a dermatomal distribution, with no corresponding limb hypertrophy or asymmetry. MRI and CT scan of the cervical spine showed aggressive vertebral haemangiomas involving the right side of C1 down to C4 vertebrae associated with extra-osseous epidural lesion causing cervical cord compression, in addition to right paraspinal muscular low flow vascular malformations. Digital subtraction angiography (DSA) of the neck vessels showed corresponding vascular blush and delayed contrast pooling in the affected regions. Cobb syndrome was diagnosed based on the dermatomal distribution of the cutaneous vascular lesions and the corresponding vertebral, epidural, and paraspinal vascular lesions occurring at the same metamere. The patient underwent a decompressive laminectomy at C2-C6 levels with removal of the epidural lesion, after which his symptoms had improved.
Background COVID-19 pandemic caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) is responsible for the newly developed worldwide outbreak of coronavirus disease with a high rate of mortality especially among elderly and multiple co-morbid personnel. Asymptomatic COVID-19-infected patients are a well-known source of transmission of infection. The risk of exposure to respiratory secretions and/or feces is hardly avoidable during the endoscopic procedure; also, the aerosol and droplets take up to an hour disperse, so they remain a risk to staff and other patients after they leave the room; therefore, strict infectious precautions should be taken by all health care workers to limit the virus spread. Main body We present an endoscopic trial of duodenal stent insertion in non-operable gastric carcinoma that is proven 2 days later to be a COVID-19-positive case. Fortunately, no one of the health care workers that came in contact with the case becomes infected owing to the proper infection control measures. Conclusion We recommended that the endoscopy examination and procedures should be strictly limited to urgent cases to minimize the risk of virus infection among health care workers.
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