[Venereal perihepatitis: Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome].

1995 
: A case of Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome (venereal perihepatitis) is reported. This syndrome is observed almost exclusively in women as a complication of genital gonococcal or chlamydial infections. A sudden, acute biliary-type pain generally characterizes the disease; only a few cases present symptoms related to associated genital infection. The real clinical incidence of venereal perihepatitis is quite high; in fact, a lot of the emergency admitted patients diagnosed with biliary colic or acute cholecystitis as a matter of fact suffer from this syndrome. If haematological investigations, ultrasonography and cholangiography do not confirm a suspected biliary lithiasis, it will be needed to investigate the genital tract. After clinical and ultrasound examinations, neisseria gonorrhoeae and chlamydia trachomatis must be sought in vaginal and cervical secretions and serum antichlamydial antibodies level is to be sought too. Through these examinations, the venereal perihepatitis can usually be diagnosed. In uncertain cases laparoscopy can be useful: in fact, it can reveal the typical violin-string-like adhesions between the anterior liver capsule and the anterior abdominal wall, and, in the same session, it allow to resect them. Tetracycline, doxycycline and, more recently, ofloxacine gave good results in the syndrome's treatment.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []