Pelvic inflammatory disease diagnostic criteria
Pelvic inflammatory disease Microchapters |
Differentiating Pelvic Inflammatory Disease from other Diseases |
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Diagnosis |
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Pelvic inflammatory disease diagnostic criteria On the Web |
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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1];Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Seyedmahdi Pahlavani, M.D. [2]
Diagnostic Criteria
CDC has developed a diagnostic criteria for prompt treatment of PID based on clinical manifestations to minimize its sequelae.
Minimum diagnostic criteria
(at least 1 must be present) |
Additional diagnostic criteria (at least 1 must be present),
increases specificity |
Definitive diagnostic criteria | ||||||||
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Cervical motion tenderness | Oral temperature > 101F (> 38.3C) | Endometrial biopsy with histopathological evidence of endometritis | ||||||||
Uterine tenderness | Abnormal cervical mucopurulent discharge or cervical friability | |||||||||
Adnexal Tenderness | Presence of abundant numbers of WBC on saline microscopy of vaginal fluid | Transvaginal ultrasound or MRI showing thickened,
fluid-filled tubes with or without free pelvic fluid or tubo-ovarian complex, or doppler studies suggesting pelvic infection (e.g., tubal hyperemia) | ||||||||
Elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate | ||||||||||
Elevated C-reactive protein | ||||||||||
Laboratory documentation of cervical infection,N. gonorrhoeae,or,C. trachomat | Laporoscopic findings consistent with PID |