Triage using a self-assessment questionnaire to detect potentially life-threatening emergencies in gynecology
A self-assessment questionnaire with three key features (vomiting, sudden pain, pain on palpation) effectively identified potentially life-threatening gynecological emergencies in acute pelvic pain patients.
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This multicenter prospective observational study evaluated a self-assessment questionnaire for gynecologic emergencies (SAQ-GE) in adults presenting to gynecology emergency rooms with acute pelvic pain, after initial pain management and before diagnostic investigations. Using laparoscopy as the reference standard for potential life-threatening emergencies (PLTEs), the authors randomly split 516 included patients into derivation and validation sets and developed a decision tree based on SAQ-GE items significantly associated with PLTEs, specifically vomiting, sudden onset of pain, and pain to palpation. The resulting model showed high sensitivity for detecting PLTEs (87.5% in the derivation set; 83.7% in validation) with specificity around 92% and 88.6%, respectively. A key limitation noted is that the triage performance relies on SAQ-GE completion after pain relief and on the exclusion of patients with hemodynamic instability or inability to complete the questionnaire, which may affect generalizability; This paper does not explicitly discuss endometriosis or adenomyosis; it was included in the corpus via a keyword match in the upstream search index.
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Cites (2)
- The diagnostic value of laparoscopy in 2365 patients with acute and chronic pelvic pain 1996
- The anatomy and neurophysiology of pelvic pain 2006
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