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Several surgical and/or medical emergencies/ urgencies may occur in gynecologic patients and in pregnant women during the first trimester. Particularly, ectopic pregnancies, ruptured or hemorrhagic ovarian cysts, ovarian or adnexal torsions, threatened or inevitable miscarriages, phlogistic gynecological disorders, complications involving the uterine fibroids, endometriosis, and spontaneous uterine rupture are possible acute complications. The diagnosis is suspected on the basis of symptoms (acute pelvic and/or abdominal pain, with or without vaginal bleeding or discharge, until acute abdomen with peritonitis), by means physical evaluation (abdominal, pelvic, and bimanual gynecological examinations), by means of transabdominal (TAS) and/or transvaginal (TVS) sonography, and laboratory tests. However, the diagnosis is often not that simple, especially when the symptoms and clinical signs are minimal, and ultrasound (US) examination is not diriment. The differential diagnosis of abdominal/pelvic pain is broad and includes primarily gastrointestinal and urogenital disorders. Generally, TAS should usually be used in conjunction with TVS for evaluation of the female pelvis. If the US examination is not conclusive, CT or MRI, especially in pregnant patients, should be considered.Riassunto Diverse emergenze/urgenze chirurgiche e/o mediche possono interessare le pazienti ginecologiche e le gravide al primo trimestre. In particolare, le gravidanze ectopiche, le cisti ovariche rotte o torte, le torsioni ovariche o annessiali, le minacce d'aborto o gli aborti inevitabili, le patologie infiammatorie ginecologiche, i fibromi uterini complicati, l'endometriosi e la rottura uterina spontanea rappresentano possibili complicanze acute. La diagnosi può essere sospettata in base alla sintomatologia (algie pelviche e/o addominali acute, con eventuali perdite vaginali, fino a un quadro di addome acuto con peritonite), alla visita (valutazione addominale, pelvica ed esplorazione ginecologica bimanuale), all'ecografia transaddominale (TAS) e/o transvaginale (TVS), e agli esami di laboratorio. Tuttavia, la diagnosi spesso non è semplice, soprattutto quando i sintomi e i segni clinici sono lievi e l'ecografia non è dirimente. La diagnosi differenziale del dolore addominale/ pelvico comprende un'ampia varietà di disordini, in particolare gastrointestinali e urogenitali. Generalmente, la valutazione della pelvi femminile dovrebbe essere eseguita mediante ecografia sia transaddominale che transvaginale. Se l'esame ecografico non consente di fare diagnosi, dovrebbero essere presi in considerazione la TC o, specialmente nelle donne gravide, la RMI.
Several surgical and/or medical emergencies/ urgencies may occur in gynecologic patients and in pregnant women during the first trimester. Particularly, ectopic pregnancies, ruptured or hemorrhagic ovarian cysts, ovarian or adnexal torsions, threatened or inevitable miscarriages, phlogistic gynecological disorders, complications involving the uterine fibroids, endometriosis, and spontaneous uterine rupture are possible acute complications. The diagnosis is suspected on the basis of symptoms (acute pelvic and/or abdominal pain, with or without vaginal bleeding or discharge, until acute abdomen with peritonitis), by means physical evaluation (abdominal, pelvic, and bimanual gynecological examinations), by means of transabdominal (TAS) and/or transvaginal (TVS) sonography, and laboratory tests. However, the diagnosis is often not that simple, especially when the symptoms and clinical signs are minimal, and ultrasound (US) examination is not diriment. The differential diagnosis of abdominal/pelvic pain is broad and includes primarily gastrointestinal and urogenital disorders. Generally, TAS should usually be used in conjunction with TVS for evaluation of the female pelvis. If the US examination is not conclusive, CT or MRI, especially in pregnant patients, should be considered.Riassunto Diverse emergenze/urgenze chirurgiche e/o mediche possono interessare le pazienti ginecologiche e le gravide al primo trimestre. In particolare, le gravidanze ectopiche, le cisti ovariche rotte o torte, le torsioni ovariche o annessiali, le minacce d'aborto o gli aborti inevitabili, le patologie infiammatorie ginecologiche, i fibromi uterini complicati, l'endometriosi e la rottura uterina spontanea rappresentano possibili complicanze acute. La diagnosi può essere sospettata in base alla sintomatologia (algie pelviche e/o addominali acute, con eventuali perdite vaginali, fino a un quadro di addome acuto con peritonite), alla visita (valutazione addominale, pelvica ed esplorazione ginecologica bimanuale), all'ecografia transaddominale (TAS) e/o transvaginale (TVS), e agli esami di laboratorio. Tuttavia, la diagnosi spesso non è semplice, soprattutto quando i sintomi e i segni clinici sono lievi e l'ecografia non è dirimente. La diagnosi differenziale del dolore addominale/ pelvico comprende un'ampia varietà di disordini, in particolare gastrointestinali e urogenitali. Generalmente, la valutazione della pelvi femminile dovrebbe essere eseguita mediante ecografia sia transaddominale che transvaginale. Se l'esame ecografico non consente di fare diagnosi, dovrebbero essere presi in considerazione la TC o, specialmente nelle donne gravide, la RMI.
ObjectiveTo determine the maximum uterine diameter threshold associated with an elevated risk of complications following laparoscopic supracervical hysterectomy (LSH).MethodsThis was a retrospective cohort study from a single tertiary referral center. We enrolled patients who underwent LSH for benign indications at our hospital between January 2013 and June 2023. The primary outcome was the occurrence of surgical complications within the 30‐day timeframe of hysterectomy. The covariate included the year of the procedure, patient age, body mass index, parity, American Society of Anesthesiologists classification, comorbidities, history of previous abdominal and pelvic surgery, and preoperative anemia, blood loss, surgical time, hospital stay and pathology. The exclusion criteria comprised those who underwent hysterectomy for malignancy, individuals who underwent total vaginal hysterectomy or laparoscopically assisted vaginal hysterectomy, and those with missing data on uterine maximum diameter, study outcomes, or covariates.ResultsWe included a final sample of 120 patients, revealing a median uterine diameter of 9.12 cm, with 9.2% experiencing complications. The median uterine weight among 40 patients was 275 g. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis suggested a potential cutoff of 11.55 cm for predicting complications, with an area under the ROC curve of 0.67. Multivariate logistic regression confirmed a significant association between uterine diameter exceeding the cutoff and increased complication risk (OR 33.925, 95% CI: 2.294–501.690, P = 0.0103). A correlation (r = 0.762, P < 0.001) between uterine weight and diameter indicated the latter's suitability for preoperative assessment of uterine weight.ConclusionThe maximum uterine diameter with an optimal cutoff of 11.55 cm was associated with increased complication risk.
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