The pathologic spectrum of uterotubal junction obstruction

Obstetrics and gynecology, 65(1), 93-98

PMID 3966030 Source

Abstract

Excised tubal segments from 42 women with uterotubal junction obstruction were studied histologically to evaluate the pathologic spectrum of disease and correlate this with clinical data. The most frequent lesion encountered was obliterative fibrosis (38.1%), confirmed by connective tissue stains, which was not associated with cornual nodularity. Other pathologic entities included salpingitis isthmica nodosa (23.8%), intramucosal endometriosis (14.3%), and chronic tubal inflammation (21.4%). Intramucosal endometriosis was distinguishable from salpingitis isthmica nodosa by virtue of its unique stroma confirmed by connective tissue staining. Women with previous pregnancies were included in all the groups. In all instances, the obstruction was present in the transmural portion of the tube and extended a variable distance into the isthmic segment. These observations on uterotubal junction obstruction demonstrate that: 1) There are multiple distinct histologic patterns, 2) Intraabdominal findings do not predict the histology of the uterotubal junction pathology, 3) Any histologic pattern can be associated with a previous intrauterine or ectopic pregnancy, and 4) The obstruction begins within the transmural portion of the oviduct, extends a variable distance into the isthmic segment, but does not obstruct the ampullary segment. These data suggest that the initiating process originates within the uterus and that fibrosis may represent a nonspecific response to chronic injury of the transmural and isthmic segments of the oviduct.

Topics

uterotubal junction obstruction, proximal tubal blockage causes, cornual obstruction pathology, salpingitis isthmica nodosa, tubal obstruction histology, proximal tubal factor infertility, uterotubal junction fibrosis, cornual blockage endometriosis, tubal microsurgery pathologic findings, transmural tubal obstruction, isthmic tubal disease

Cite this article

Fortier, K. J., & Haney, A. F. (1985). The pathologic spectrum of uterotubal junction obstruction. *Obstetrics and gynecology*, *65*(1), 93-98.

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