General term for infection of the upper female genital tract, including the uterus, Fallopian tubes, and ovaries
Aetiology
- Usually results from ascending infection from endocervix
- Endometritis, salphingitis, tubo-ovarian abscess
- Chlymydia, gonorrhoea, gardenella, anaerobes
Clinical presentation
Symptoms
- Abnormal vaginal bleeding (postcoital, intermenstrual or menorrhagia)
- Abnormal vaginal discharge (especially if purulent or with an unpleasant odour)
Signs
- On vaginal examination, there may be tenderness of uterus/adnexae or cervical excitation (on bimanual palpation)
- There may be a palpable mass in the lower abdomen, with an abnormal vaginal discharge noted
- In severe cases - fever above 38°C (but may be apyrexial)
Investigations
- Urine dipstick +/- MSU to exclude UTI
- Transvaginal US - if severe disease or dignostic uncertainty
- Laparoscopy - indicated only in severe cases where there is diagnostic uncertainty
Management
- Metronidazole 400mg bd + ofloxacin 400mg bd (14 days)
- If under 18 or high risk of gonorrhea - ceftriaxone 1G IM, doxycycline 100mg bd x 2 weeks and metronidazole 400mg bd x 2 weeks
Complications
- Untreated PID can lead to serious complications, including infertility, ectopic pregnancy, abscess formation and chronic pelvic pain