pubmed:otherAbstract |
PIP: Presented is the first case report of intraperitoneal Neisseria gonorrhoea infection after tubal ligation. The patient, a 34-year-old women who underwent bilateral tubal ligation 10 years prior to presentation, complained of right lower quadrant pain, fever, chills, anorexia, and constipation. Prior to sterilization, she had been treated at least 3 times for pelvic inflammatory disease (PID). Laparotomy revealed 200 mL of free pus in the abdominal cavity, induration of the proximal stump of the right fallopian tube, and a tuboperitoneal fistula. the intraperitoneal culture was positive for N gonorrhoea and pathology demonstrated acute salpingitis. Treatment with ampicillin, gentamicin, and clindamycin eliminated the infection, although uterine and adnexal tenderness persisted at the 6-week follow-up. Falk's postulate that cornual resection prevents reinfection with PID of the upper genital tract apparently cannot be extended to isthmic interruption of the lower and upper tracts. Since this case demonstrates that there can be ascending gonococcal infection in women with prior tubal sterilization, PID should be part of the differential diagnosis of all sterilized women who present with acute pelvic pain.
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