Chronic Pelvic Pain
By Geri D. Hewitt, MD, and Robert T. Brown, MD
Reprinted by permission from Contemporary Adolescent Gynecology Magazine.
Whether the source is physical or psychosocial
or both, the impact is real and serious for the
teenager. She needs symptomatic relief,
sympathy, and support while you explore a
variety of possible causes.
Chronic pelvic pain is classically described as noncyclic pain of at
least 6 months' duration. In the adolescent, this condition often
frustrates the patient, her parents, and her clinician. Such pain also
can lead to changes in family dynamics, school absenteeism, and
other significant functional problems. The young woman with chronic
pelvic pain may visit several physicians in search of specific diagnoses,
effective treatments, and relief of her symptoms. Over a period of time,
she might in turn see a pediatrician, gynecologist, gastroenterologist,
and emergency department doctor.
Anatomy of pain perception
Understanding chronic pelvic pain begins with understanding how and
why patients respond to painful stimuli. Several models have been
proposed. One is the classic medical or Cartesian model, which
postulates that pain perception results directly from and is related to
the extent of local tissue destruction. According to this model, pain in
the absence of tissue injury is psychogenic. Unfortunately, while this
theory may help us understand acute causes of pain such as
appendicitis, its omission of nonorganic causes makes it a poor model
for chronic pain syndromes.
Many studies have documented that psychological and social factors
predict a patient's response to painful stimuli as well as or better than
does the amount of tissue destruction. The gate-control theory of pain
therefore provides a better model for chronic pelvic pain because it
integrates peripheral stimuli with variables such as depression or
anxiety that influence the patient's perception of pain. In this model,
both somatic and psychogenic factors can potentiate or modify
response to pain. However, the gate-control theory falls short by failing
to recognize the many social factors believed to affect a patient's
responses to pain and to therapy. These factors include familial
response to pain as well as the patient's level of educational attainment
and socioeconomic status.
The biopsychosocial theory of pain perhaps provides the most
comprehensive model for dealing with chronic pelvic pain in the
adolescent. It was developed to try to integrate all the factors that
contribute to a patient's perception of pain: nociceptive stimuli,
psychological state, and social determinants. This model also explains
a phenomenon called symptom "shifting," often seen in patients with
chronic pain syndromes. In symptom shifting, removing the nociceptive
(mechanical, thermal, or chemical) stimuli but failing to address
psychological or social concerns may cause the patient to develop
symptoms at an alternative site. Thus, the young woman whose pelvic
pain appears to be cured by medical therapy may start to experience
headaches. Similarly, a woman who undergoes a surgical intervention
that temporarily alleviates her symptoms may suffer pain elsewhere or
a relapse of her pelvic pain with even more disabling symptoms.1
In evaluating an adolescent with chronic pelvic pain it's therefore
important to recognize that a variety of somatic, psychological, and
social factors may, alone or in combination, play a role in the pain
syndrome. Several authorities have emphasized the value of examining
these variables concomitantly from the very start of the evaluation.2
One prospective, randomized trial compared patients considered for
both organic and psychosocial causes of pain at the initial visit with
patients considered for psychosocial causes only after organic
pathology had been ruled out. Patients in the first group had not only
better responses to therapies but also improved long-term outcome.3
TABLE 1
Causes of chronic pelvic pain in adolescent women
Gynecologic
- Endometriosis
- PID
- Pelvic adhesive disease
- Congenital anomalies
- Ovarian masses
- Chronic ectopic pregnancy
Urologic
- UTI
- Kidney stones
- Interstitial cystitis
- Urethral syndrome
Gastrointestinal
- Constipation
- Irritable bowel syndrome
- Gastroenteritis
- Lactose intolerance
- IBD
- Appendicitis
- Hernia
Musculoskeletal
- Postural
- Trigger points
- Joint pain
- Inflammation
- Spinal injury
Psychosocial
- Depression
- Sexual abuse
- Substance abuse
- Eating disorder
- School avoidance
- Need for contraception (?)
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The range of organic causes
Gynecologic disorders. The broad differential diagnosis for organic
sources of chronic pelvic pain in adolescence includes gynecologic,
urologic, gastroenterologic, and musculoskeletal causes (TABLE 1).
Gynecologic possibilities include adnexal lesions, such as ovarian
tumors or chronic ectopic pregnancy; infectious causes such as pelvic
inflammatory disease (PID) or tubo-ovarian abscess (TOA); and
endometriosis, which may be associated with Müllerian anomalies.
Whether pelvic adhesive disease causes chronic pelvic pain is
somewhat controversial, since the incidence of adhesions is the same
for patients undergoing laparoscopy for chronic pelvic pain as for
women undergoing laparoscopy for elective sterilization. However,
many authors suggest that adhesions that impinge on or limit organ
function (for example, by restricting bowel motility) may cause pain.
Until this relationship is demonstrated, it's advisable to counsel
patients that adhesions may or may not be the cause of pain, that
surgical lysis of adhesions may or may not relieve pain, and that
adhesions may reform at old sites or form de novo.
Ultrasound evaluation for chronic pelvic pain often reveals physiologic or
functional ovarian cysts. Such cysts may be present even in
premenarcheal girls who have low levels of circulating gonadotropins.
However, it's important to resist concluding that these cysts are the
cause of the pain. This assumption may cause other, more likely
causes to be overlooked. It may also lead to unnecessary surgery. In
the vast majority of patients, ovarian cysts are not the source of the
pain and will resolve either spontaneously or with suppression when
using oral contraceptives (OCs). Adolescents operated on for ovarian
cysts, particularly premenarcheal girls, often end up with an
oophorectomy even if the surgeon's preoperative intention was to do
only a cystectomy. Even if the patient's cystectomy preserves her
ovaries, she may be at risk for adhesion formation that may lead to
infertility.
Urologic sources. Urinary tract infection (UTI) is a common cause of
pelvic pain in adolescent females. UTIs can present with abdominal
pain, dysuria, and/or hematuria and, if untreated, can progress to
pyelonephritis. Kidney stones, interstitial cystitis, and urethral
syndrome, while much less common than UTI, should also be ruled
out.
Gastroenterologic causes. Because the pelvic organs and lower GI
tract share visceral innervation, various GI causes may be contributing
to the pain and need to be considered. Some of these causes can be
diagnosed according to symptoms and the physical examination;
others require abdominal films or endoscopy. Constipation, for
example, is the most common problem, particularly if the patient's diet
is poor. It can be diagnosed easily by physical exam and abdominal
films and easily corrected by increasing hydration and dietary fiber
intake. A dietary history is also important when evaluating a patient for
lactose intolerance.
Irritable bowel syndrome is another condition often encountered in
young women being evaluated for chronic pelvic pain. Keep in mind that
adolescents with chronic pelvic pain and those with irritable bowel
syndrome share a higher risk for stress-related psychopathologies
such as somatization, depression, and anxiety. Peptic ulcer disease,
gastroenteritis, and inflammatory bowel disease also should be
considered and may be diagnosed by endoscopy. Chronic appendicitis
and hernias may require a consultation with a general surgeon for
correction.
Musculoskeletal problems. Musculoskeletal abnormalities can cause
pelvic pain, usually because of an increase in muscle tone. Lumbar
vertebrae, joint capsules, ligaments, discs, hip joints, and muscles
such as the abdominals, iliopsoas, quadratus lumborum, piriformis, and
obturator internus and externus are innervated from the T12 to L4 region
of the spine and can refer pain to the lower abdomen and the anterior
thigh. This pain can change in character as progesterone and relaxin
levels fluctuate during the menstrual cycle.
The intensity and location of musculoskeletal pain may also shift in
response to variations in posture or specific activities. Poor posture or
leg-length discrepancy can produce mechanical stress on joint
capsules, ligaments, and muscles that can lead to chronic pelvic pain.
Trigger points - areas of hyperirritability within a skeletal muscle - also
can give rise to referred pain and tenderness. Trigger points begin with
a muscle strain, followed by sensitization of the nerve bundle. Pain
from this source can be treated by injecting a local anesthetic.
Other musculoskeletal causes of pelvic pain include joint pain,
inflammation, and spinal injury.
FIGURE 1
Model for sources of chronic pelvic pain |
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| Adapted from Levine ME, Rappaport LA: Recurrent abdominal pain in school children.
Pediatr Clin North Am 1984;31(5):969 |
Coping with psychogenic pain
Pelvic pain can be of psychosomatic origin in adolescence, a time of
rapid change when awareness of bodily functions and sensations is
heightened. It is also a time when the adolescent is encountering many
new stressors. In addition to the stresses of rapid growth and
development, there often are added school pressures, economic
worries, and the problems of burgeoning sexuality. Adjusting to such
stresses, even temporary ones, can induce physical symptoms. And
stresses that don't go away - for example, those stemming from sexual
abuse or parents divorcing - may produce significant physical
symptoms, particularly if the adolescent's temperament or
circumstances prevent her from coping well.
Coping style can also play a significant role in the development and
persistence of psychosomatic symptoms.5 Some adolescents can
cope proactively with stress. For example, when the home situation
becomes intolerable, this type of adolescent can respond with a
decisive action, possibly by running away. The adolescent who copes
in a passive manner may show no immediate overt reaction to a
stressor but may go on to exhibit chronic pain symptoms or fatigue.
Other factors that affect an adolescent's ability to cope with stress
include lifestyle and major life events. A lifestyle of regularity
characterized by regular times for meals, regular study and exercise
habits, and regular sleeping patterns may enable an adolescent to
cope more effectively with stresses when they occur. In contrast, the
adolescent who is poorly organized and burns the candle at both ends
may have more difficulty dealing with stress. Occurrence of a major
stressful life event, such as moving, the death of a parent or sibling, or
a natural disaster, may also severely challenge the ability of an
adolescent to cope. When two or more of these events occur within a
short time, the likelihood of maladaptive coping and the production of
psychosomatic symptoms such as pelvic pain increase significantly.
In making the diagnosis, remember that family violence is not only very
prevalent but has a wide variety of physical, behavioral, and emotional
manifestations.35,36 As shown in Table 1, many indicators are
nonspecific, so you need to ask a few open-ended questions (see
examples in Table 2) to obtain the information you need.37 If you
observe indicators of violence, follow up with screening and further
assessment.
Figure 1 shows a variety of patient characteristics and circumstances
can combine to produce psychosomatic symptoms. In this model, all
the factors that can account for the appearance of psychosomatic
symptoms are included, with their possible interactions.
History and diagnosis
History taking should emphasize the duration and frequency of
symptoms, location and severity of pain, and medications and
therapies tried. In addition to current medications, review past medical
illness and surgeries. Also explore causes of exacerbation and
improvement and ask whether other family members have had similar
symptoms. Symptom modeling is a well-known phenomenon of
psychosomatic problems. A prospective pain calendar can be useful in
obtaining information; the patient should also record her menses to
help identify any cyclic component.
Gynecologic history should include sexual activity, exposure to
sexually transmitted diseases, age at menarche, menstrual
irregularities, and gravidity and parity. Ask about any family history of
endometriosis; patients with a first-degree relative with endometriosis
face a 7% risk of the same diagnosis.5 Frequency, dysuria, or
hematuria may suggest a urologic cause. Review dietary history,
nausea or vomiting, and bowel habits to evaluate GI sources of pain.
Psychosocial factors should also be reviewed carefully, with questions
about history of depression, eating disorders, or substance abuse, as
well as the number of school days missed. Assess coping style
carefully, and ascertain occurrence of any recent major life changes.
A focused physical exam should be done to assess the various
potential sources of pain. To screen for musculoskeletal causes of
pain, examine the patient's posture to look for evidence of lordosis,
one-legged standing, or leg-length discrepancy. Palpate the upper and
lower back while the patient is sitting. Once she is supine, have her do
leg flexion and head and leg raises while palpating her abdominal wall.
Ask her to point to the area where the degree of pain is greatest. With
psychosomatic pain, the adolescent typically has difficulty isolating a
small area of pain origin.
While performing the pelvic exam, consider urologic as well as
gynecologic causes of pain. Palpate the urethra and bladder base and
note any specific tenderness. Also palpate the vaginal fornices for
tenderness or masses. On bimanual exam, evaluate the uterus and
explore for adnexa. A rectal examination is also essential, particularly if
a GI source or endometriosis is suspected. If you detect a large mass
of soft stool or if the patient has a wide rectal vault, suspect
constipation.
Laboratory tests that should be included in the evaluation are complete
blood cell count (CBC) with differential, urinalysis, urine culture
sensitivity, and erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR). Add cervical
cultures and b-hCG pregnancy testing for patients who are sexually
active. A plain film of the abdomen is helpful if constipation is
suspected. Reserve pelvic ultrasound for patients with an identified
abnormality or compromised exam. Pelvic ultrasound should not be
ordered routinely for pelvic pain, nor should it be used in place of a
physical exam.
TABLE 2
Indications for laparoscopy
- Progressive dysmenorrhea
- Dysmenorrhea unresponsive to drug therapy
- Painful irregular vaginal bleeding
- Suspected organic lesion
- Suspected PID
- Suspected endometriosis
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When to do laparoscopy
An advantage of laparoscopy is that in many conditions it can
document the diagnosis as well as provide the route for therapy. It can
be beneficial for certain adolescents with chronic pelvic pain but should
be done only when indicated. Indications include a suspected organic
lesion identified on physical exam or ultrasound, progressive
dysmenorrhea or dysmenorrhea unresponsive to drug therapy, and
unexplained painful irregular vaginal bleeding. It may also be needed for
patients with suspected chronic PID; it should definitely be done when
endometriosis is suspected (TABLE 2).
Endometriosis can be diagnosed only by laparoscopy, and it can often
be treated at the time of diagnosis by either electrocoagulation or laser
vaporization. Endometriosis has been documented as early as 6
months after menarche and in girls as young as 11 years old.6
Identifying and treating it early may decrease the patient's risk of pelvic
adhesive disease and infertility. The diagnosis of endometriosis may
also influence her choice of contraception and timing of pregnancy. In
patients with endometriosis, a concomitant MŸllerian anomaly should
be ruled out.
Findings at time of laparoscopy have varied, depending on patient
selection, preoperative suspicion of endometriosis, and type of operator
(general surgeon or gynecologist); in four studies, 56% to 88% of
patients had identifiable lesions, most of which could be treated at the
time of laparoscopy (TABLE 3).6-9 In three of the four studies, in
patients with organic pathology, endometriosis was the most common
finding (TABLE 3).6,8,9 In the fourth, no endometriosis was found, but
this study was done in 1977 by general surgeons before there was a
clear understanding that adolescents may have endometriosis and that
its appearance in adolescents (clear vesicles) differs from that in adults
(classic powder burns).7
In addition to endometriosis, other laparoscopic findings for chronic
pelvic pain include PID, TOAs, pelvic adhesive disease,
hemoperitoneum, ovarian cysts, pelvic tuberculosis, serositis, and
paratubal cysts.
Up to 40% of adolescents undergoing laparoscopy for chronic pelvic
pain will have no pathologic findings. Don't underestimate the value of
negative findings in providing reassurance for the patient and her
parents. Symptoms resolve in approximately 60% of patients after a
negative laparoscopy for chronic pelvic pain. For optimal reassurance,
have pictures showing normal anatomy of the uterus, fallopian tubes,
ovaries, bladder, cul-de-sac, appendix, and liver edge taken during
surgery and share them with the patient and her family. This
reassurance is particularly helpful to a patient whose pain has a
psychosomatic component.
TABLE 3
Pathology identified during laparoscopy |
| Study |
No. of patients |
Patients negative finding |
Patients with organic lesions |
Patients with endometriosis |
Kleinhaus,
et al. 7 |
50 |
44% |
56% |
0% |
Goldstein,
et al. 6 |
140 |
14% |
86% |
47% |
Chatman and
Ward 8 |
73 |
12% |
88% |
65% |
Vercellini,
et al. 9 |
47 |
40% |
60% |
38% |
When no clear cause is found
In the adolescent for whom laparoscopy is thought not to be indicated
or in whom it has detected no organic abnormality, further management
is needed. The best approach in these cases is to attend first to the
patient's symptoms. From the first visit, even if no clear etiology is
found, the physician can show serious concern for the patient by
offering symptomatic relief. Simple measures such as applying heat to
the abdomen, helping to regularize bowel movements, and offering an
exercise program can be effective.
Listen attentively to the language the family uses to describe feelings
about the girl's problems. If the family asks to have the pain fixed,
describe the various ways that might be considered. Mention at the first
visit the possibility that the pain might be of nonorganic origin.
Validating this possibility early makes the assistance of a psychologist
or social worker more palatable to the family and patient if that should
become necessary. If you wait until all tests and procedures are
finished before suggesting that a psychosocial factor might be the
culprit, the family may interpret this as indicating that the physician
thinks the problem is imaginary. Since the pain in her belly is obviously
real, such a suggestion usually will send the patient to her next
physician in the commonly seen phenomenon of doctor shopping.
By providing sympathy and support for the patient's symptoms and the
family's concerns, the physician frequently can form a true therapeutic
alliance that will alleviate the patient's disease even if the symptom is
not totally relieved. Combined with judicious use of diagnostic
technology, this approach should enable you to be successful in
treating the majority of adolescents with chronic pelvic pain.
Educational resources from NASPAG
Whether your practice of adolescent gynecology is clinical or
academic, there are publications from the North American Society for
Pediatrics and Adolescent Gynecology (NASPAG) that will help you be
more successful in your work.
The most recent offering is the patient education pamphlet Pediatric
Vulvovaginitis: Information for Parents. With an attractively illustrated,
easy-to-read format, it takes parents step by step through a
comprehensive explanation of vulvovaginitis, how it may affect young
girls, and how it is treated and prevented. There also is a section where
you can write suggestions and instructions for the patient and a place
for you to stamp your office address and telephone number. NASPAG
is the only organization that offers patient information literature on this
unique subject.
Last year's PediGYN Teaching Slide Set continues to be a major
success. With 140 35-mm color transparencies and accompanying
notes, this slide set is versatile, convenient, and a valuable teaching
tool. Those who have already purchased the set often report that it is in
constant use. Since the set does denote a considerable financial
investment, many prospective buyers acquire it through their
departmental budgets.
Both of these items may be obtained by calling NASPAG's central
office at (302) 234-4047. The price of a package of 25 pamphlets is $10
(plus shipping and handling) and the cost of the slide set is $299 (plus
$17 for shipping and handling). All sales are final.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The authors would like to thank Tracy Fox and Harold E. Regan, Jr.,
MA, for their technical assistance and diligence in completing this
manuscript
REFERENCES
- Rosenthal RH: Psychology of chronic pelvic pain. Obstet
Gynecol Clin North Am 1993;20:627
- Gambone JC, Reiter R: Nonsurgical management of chronic
pelvic pain: A multidisciplinary approach. Clin Obstet Gynecol
1990;33:205
- Peters AAW, van Dorst E, Jellis B, et al: A randomized clinical
trial to compare two different approaches in women with chronic
pelvic pain. Obstet Gynecol 1991;77:740
- Ryan-WengerNM: Children's psychosomatic responses to
stress, in Arnold LE (ed): Childhood Stress. New York, John
Wiley & Sons, 1990, pp 110 - 137
- Malinak LR, Buttram VC Jr, Elias S, et al: Heritable aspects of
endometriosis: II. Clinical characteristics of familial
endometriosis. Am J Obstet Gynecol 1980;137:332
- Goldstein DP, de Cholnoky C, Emans SJ, et al: Laparoscopy in
the diagnosis and management of pelvic pain in adolescents. J
Reprod Med 1980;24:251
- Kleinhaus S, Hein K, Sheran M, et al: Laparoscopy for
diagnosis and of abdominal pain in adolescent girls. Arch Surg
1977;112:1178
- Chatman DL, Ward AB: Endometriosis in adolescents. J Reprod
Med 1982;27:156
- Vercellini P, Fedele L, Arcaini L, et al: Laparoscopy in the
diagnosis of chronic pelvic pain in adolescent women. JReprod
Med 1989;34:827
Dr. Hewitt is assistant professor of clinical obstetrics and gynecology and Dr. Brown is professor of clinical pediatrics, Columbus Children's Hospital and The Ohio State University College of Medicine, Columbus, OH.
Copyright © 1999 Medical Economics Company. Reprinted by permission from Contemporary Adolescent Gynecology Magazine.
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