Demographic and historic variables in women with idiopathic chronic pelvic pain

Obstetrics and gynecology, 75(3 Pt 1), 428-432

PMID 2304712 Source

Abstract

A comprehensive historic, demographic, and medical questionnaire was administered to 106 women referred to a multidisciplinary clinic for evaluation of idiopathic chronic pelvic pain and to 92 age-matched, pain-free control patients presenting for routine annual examination. Although racial distribution, mean gravidity and parity, and rates of elective abortion were similar in both groups of respondents, spontaneous abortion was reported significantly more frequently among women with pelvic pain. Patients in the study group were also more likely to be on active military duty, to have undergone previous nongynecologic surgery, and to have sought treatment for unrelated somatic complaints. Finally, although the mean ages at first intercourse were similar, women with idiopathic pelvic pain reported a higher total number of sexual partners and were significantly more likely to have experienced previous significant psychosexual trauma. These findings confirm that predisposing psychosocial variables are important in the pathogenesis of idiopathic pelvic pain and emphasize the significance of multidisciplinary evaluation and management.

Topics

chronic pelvic pain psychosocial factors, idiopathic pelvic pain demographics, sexual trauma pelvic pain association, spontaneous abortion chronic pain, multidisciplinary pelvic pain evaluation, psychosexual history pelvic pain, nongynecologic surgery pelvic pain, pelvic pain root causes, somatic complaints pelvic pain correlation, comprehensive pelvic pain assessment

Cite this article

Reiter, R. C., & Gambone, J. C. (1990). Demographic and historic variables in women with idiopathic chronic pelvic pain. *Obstetrics and gynecology*, *75*(3 Pt 1), 428-432.

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