Chronic inflammation of the peritoneum and vagina: review of its significance, immunologic pathogenesis, investigation and rationale for treatment.
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Abstract
Chronic inflammation is not an infrequent histologic finding in symptomatic gynecologic patients. It is present in 14.6% of peritoneal biopsies in women with chronic pelvic pain in whom no other cause of pain is evident. It is found in almost all vaginal biopsies in noninfected women with dyspareunia and discharge of vaginal mucosal origin. It represents a local immunologically activated inflammatory disorder. When investigations are car ried out as to whether it is a local representation of a systemic disorder, numerous systemic inflammatory and autoimmune disorders are discovered. A study of chronic pain reveals that the immune system is intimately involved in the production, conduction and exacerbation of pain and of its clinicalfeatures, such as hyperalgesia and allodynia. Immune modification using local steroids and disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs, such as hydroxychloroquine, are known to inhibit inflammatory cells and cytokines, such as interleukin-1, interleukin-6 and tumor necrosis factor, which are responsible for pain and tissue damage. These drugs are found to be effective in the treatment of chronic pelvic pain when of an inflammatory nature and for symptomatic chronic inflammation of the vagina.
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