Ovarian Torsion with Dr. Jennifer Dietrich podcast cover art
3 Views
0 Likes
0 Shares
0 Comments

StayCurrentMD

View profile →

Ovarian Torsion with Dr. Jennifer Dietrich

Published:

Topic overview

Dr. Jennifer Dietrich discusses the evaluation and management of ovarian torsion in adolescent females, emphasizing the importance of thorough history-taking, pelvic ultrasound interpretation, and clinical judgment. She clarifies that presence of blood flow on ultrasound does not rule out torsion, as intermittent torsion or isolated tubal torsion can preserve ovarian perfusion.

Key takeaways

  • Always check pregnancy test in reproductive-age females with lower abdominal pain, regardless of reported sexual activity.
  • Ultrasound showing ovarian asymmetry and absent blood flow is most concerning for torsion; presence of flow does NOT rule it out.
  • Intermittent torsion or isolated tubal torsion can show preserved ovarian blood flow despite ongoing pathology.
  • Clinical picture (acute pain, nausea, vomiting) plus ultrasound asymmetry warrants high suspicion even with normal Doppler flow.
  • Ultrasound remains superior to CT for evaluating ovaries in adolescents, even in higher BMI patients with adequate bladder filling.

Keywords

Hashtags

Transcript

Click "Show Transcript" to view the full text (42757 characters)

Comments

Loading comments...