Abstract
Transvaginal color Doppler sonography (TV-CDS) was performed on 64 women with adnexal masses at 3, 6 and 12 weeks after initial presentation. In 47 (72% of patients studied), the pelvic mass demonstrated a decrease in size and increase in pulsatility index (PI) after 12 weeks. Of the patients undergoing surgery in this group, one had a tubo-ovarian abscess, one diverticular abscess and one hydrosalpinx. In seven patients (10%), there was no change in size or PI. Three in this group had an endometrioma, whereas two had a peritoneal cyst. In five (7%), there was no change in size and an increase in PI. One of these patients had a mucinous cystadenoma. In three (5%), there was a decrease in size and PI. Two of these patients had a tubo-ovarian abscess. In two (3%) patients studied, the mass showed an increase in size and decrease in PI; both had corpora luteum cysts with acute hemorrhage. Seventy-two percent of masses with high impedance underwent regression, whereas only 21% of lesions with low impedance did. Only 20% of masses demonstrating low impedance or morphologically complex structure regressed. Sixtyfive percent of lesions that regressed had a significant drop in PI, whereas all the lesions that showed no change in size or enlargement had either no change or decrease in PI. Probability of regression was the greatest in young women (less than 40 years of age) and in masses < 5 cm. Ninety-three percent of women with persistent masses that underwent progestational suppression demonstrated regression with decrease of PI and peak systolic velocity. Three masses that did not respond included two hemorrhagic tubo-ovarian abscesses and one cystadenoma. Changes in PI were more predictive of regression (92%) than morphology or patient age. Therefore, TV-CDS was a useful parameter in schemes to distinguish masses in those patients whose may spontaneously regress from those that might fail to regress or enlarge.
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