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Pelvic Abscesses
A pelvic abscess most commonly follows acute appendicitis, or after gynaecological infections. In males the abscess is located between the bladder and the rectum. In females the abscess lies between the uterus and the posterior fornix of the vagina, and the rectum posteriorly. A pelvic abscess may grow quite large without making a patient very ill, or causing obvious signs, and so may be easily missed.
- Uncommon
- Predisposing factors include Crohn's disease, diabetes mellitus, immunodeficiency and pregnancy
- Systemic features of toxicity: fever, malaise, anorexia, nausea, vomiting, pyrexia
- Local effects, e.g. pain, deep tenderness in one or both lower quadrants, diarrhoea, mucous discharge per rectum, urinary frequency, dysuria.
- Rectal or vaginal examination may reveal tenderness of the pelvic peritoneum and bulging of the anterior rectal wall.
- There may be partial obstruction of the small intestine.
A pelvic abscess may form following:
- Pelvic inflammatory disease.
- Appendicitis
- Diverticulitis
- Generalised peritonitis, e.g. from a perforated peptic ulcer
- Full blood count: leucocytosis
- Sigmoidoscopy
- Barium enema
- Ultrasound
- CT/MRI may be more effective at identifying origin of the abscess1
- Management is usually by drainage of the abscess along with antibiotic treatment. Antibiotics used alone are occasionally effective for very early, small abscesses.
- If there are no signs that the infection is spreading upwards into the peritoneal cavity, operation is not urgent. Antibiotics are given as for peritonitis (cephalosporin or gentamicin, plus metronidazole or clindamycin) with close monitoring of the patient's temperature and the mass. The abscess should then be drained as soon as it is "ripe".
- An abscess which is enlarging suprapubically needs draining urgently.
- A pelvic abscess following a septic abortion or puerperal sepsis may be caused by anaerobes, and so be particularly serious and likely to spread. The abscess should be drained early.
- Ultrasound guided aspiration and drainage2: the abscess should be rectally drained in men, and in females it should be drained vaginally. This is preferable to laparotomy, but this may be necessary.
- In females the abscess is more difficult to diagnose if coils of gut lie between the abscess and the posterior fornix and it may have to be drained suprapubically.
- Percutaneous abscess drainage is performed using CT or sonographic guidance3.
- The prognosis will depend on the aetiology of the abscess, underlying well-being of the patient and the speed of diagnosis and effective management.
- An abscess sometimes drains spontaneously into the rectum.
Document References
- Foshager MC, Hood LL, Walsh JW; Masses simulating gynecologic diseases at CT and MR imaging.; Radiographics. 1996 Sep;16(5):1085-99. [abstract]
- Feld R, Eschelman DJ, Sagerman JE, et al; Treatment of pelvic abscesses and other fluid collections: efficacy of transvaginal sonographically guided aspiration and drainage.; AJR Am J Roentgenol. 1994 Nov;163(5):1141-5. [abstract]
- Fulcher AS, Turner MA; Percutaneous drainage of enteric-related abscesses.; Gastroenterologist. 1996 Dec;4(4):276-85. [abstract]
DocID: 1239
Document Version: 20
DocRef: bgp233
Last Updated: 24 Jul 2006
Review Date: 23 Jul 2008
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