Chronic Pelvic Pain
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Transcript Chronic Pelvic Pain
BC Women’s Centre for Pelvic Pain & Endometriosis
www.womenspelvicpainendo.com
Chronic Pelvic Pain
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CPP: Objectives
At the end of today, you will be able to:
1. List 3 tools that may be useful in assessing
CPP
2. Understand nociceptive triggers to CPP and
how to decrease them
3. Describe the possible contributors to CPP
4. Know why and how to calm the central NS
5. Understand the effect of narcotic usage on CPP
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Chronic Pelvic Pain
CPP is “one of the most common
medical problems affecting women
today” (IPPS, 2012)
Affects 17%-24% of women aged
18-50 (IPPS, 2012; Zondervan, 1999)
50% of women with CPP also have
endometriosis (10% of women
overall) … but 50% do not (Leyland et
al., 2010)
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A Case of Chronic Pelvic Pain
27 year old G1P1 woman with a 3 year history
of CPP
Dysmenorrhea since age 15
Became daily CPP soon after SVD of her son
Bilateral adnexal pain radiating to inguinal area
Constant, with some exacerbation at menses
Aggravated by physical activity
Patient requesting hysterectomy because of
impact of pain on her life
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CPP: Medical History
Bowel: Alternating constipation & diarrhea
Bladder: No symptoms
Vaginal: No dyspareunia
Surgeries:
Laparoscopy x4 (Jan/10, Aug/10, Feb/11, Sep/11); mild
endometriosis cauterized; some improvement for ~3
months
Medications:
Past: Trial of Depot-Lupron = intolerable side-effects and
no change in Sx
Current: 16mg/d hydromorphone, medical marijuana,
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continuous OCPs…. Still has daily (7/10) pain and
CPP: Psychosocial History
Self-report:
Lives with long-term partner and their 3 year old son
Denies alcohol or recreational drug use
Unable to work; difficulty caring for child
Mood is frustrated, stressed, not depressed
Pain worse when under a lot of stress
Childhood sexual abuse (age 6-12) by family member
Clinical assessment:
Sx of trauma/PTSD, anxiety, depression
Multiple life stressors, few social supports, recent losses
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CPP: Exam
Bilateral lower quadrant
tenderness with abdominal wall
trigger points
No uterine or adnexal
tenderness
No cul-de-sac tenderness or
nodularity
Pelvic floor is tender and has
increased tone
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Assessment Tools
High scores on pain
catastrophizing scale (PCS)
PHQ9 – 3
GAD7 - 10
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CPP:
Clinical Impression
Dysmenorrhea/endometriosis
Pelvic floor tension
Bowel irritability; likely narcotic
side-effects
Central sensitization of NS
Aggravated by trauma, anxiety,
depression, many life stressors,
recent losses, few social supports
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Discussion Questions
List 3 tools that may be useful in further
assessing this patient?
Describe the possible contributors to her pain.
Are there any nociceptive triggers that could be
decreased?
How can she calm her central nervous system?
What about her narcotic usage?
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Action Plan
• Discourage hysterectomy, as non-tender uterus
and primarily myofascial pain on exam
Trial of progestin for suppression
of menses
Taper off narcotics by 10% q 2
weeks
Bowel regimen;
diet modifications
• Education
on chronic
pain
– NS sensitization, calming the NS, MBSR, pacing activity
• Community pelvic floor physiotherapy
• Community psychotherapy (MBCT/CBT, grief ,
trauma)
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CPP: Summary
When working with CPP, it is important to know
that:
1. Assessment tools can be very helpful
2. There are many contributors to CPP
3. Nociceptive triggers need to be decreased
4. Calming the central nervous system is crucial
5. Narcotics usage is not always the best option
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Centre for Pelvic Pain & Endometriosis
•
Interdisciplinary
approach
•
The team:
Gynecologists
– Gynecology fellow
– Registered nurse
– Registered pelvic floor
physiotherapist
– Registered clinical
counsellor
– Clerks
–
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Questions
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