RESUMO
OBJECTIVES: Prospective evaluation of symptoms and quality of life before and after surgical treatment of endometriosis with bowel involvement. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Changes in symptoms, sexuality and quality of life before and after surgery of 41 patients operated for bowel endometriosis at the centre hospitalier de Versailles (CHV) were assessed with a self-assessment questionnaire. Pains were assessed using five visual analog scales, symptoms using 26 questions with a four-level Likert item, sexuality using the SEXACQ, and quality of life using the EHP-5 and the EQ-5D VAS. RESULTS: Surgical treatment improves pain: VAS scores for main pain (P<0.0001), dysmenorrhea (P=0.0039), defecation pain (P=0.0312), non-cyclic pelvic pain (P=0.0002), and dyspareunia (P=0.0084). Twelve intestinal symptoms are improved, including three significantly. It also improves SEXACQ score (P=0.0068) and quality of life scores EHP-5 and EQ-5D VAS (P=0.0001 and P=0.0003 respectively). No difference was found between disk resection and segmental resection in terms of symptoms, sexuality and quality of life. Histological analysis suggests that when a segmental resection is done, the stage of the endometriosis bowel involvement is more advanced. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: Surgery of bowel endometriosis improves symptoms and quality of life. When the stage of the bowel endometriosis is advanced, a segmental resection should be done. Moreover, self-assessment questionnaire used at the CHV seems an appropriate tool to evaluate functional outcome.
Assuntos
Endometriose/cirurgia , Enteropatias/cirurgia , Qualidade de Vida , Adulto , Feminino , Humanos , Estudos Prospectivos , Sexualidade , Inquéritos e Questionários , Escala Visual Analógica , Adulto JovemRESUMO
Thymus hyperplasia and Graves' disease association is not well known and is probably not incidental. We report the case of a young woman affected with Graves' disease in which a retrosternal mass was disclosed during a neck ultrasonographic-examination and confirmed by chest CT-examination. Follow-up ultrasound survey showed a decrease in the thymic mass size. Because of various antithyroid drugs allergy, a surgical procedure was performed, during which both her thyroid and thymic mass were removed. The histopathologic examination of this mass confirmed the hyperplasic nature of the thymic bulging. Ninety-one cases of thymus hyperplasia and Graves' disease association have been reported in literature, of which 20 were histologically confirmed. Among these cases 35 showed a thymic mass regression under medical treatment alone. Accordingly, surgical procedures are most frequently unnecessary in such associations because of the thymic mass decrease incurred by antithyroid drug treatment.