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Home: Health A to Z: Adhesion

Health A to Z


Adhesion

Definition
Treatment
Alternative Names
Expectations (prognosis)
Causes, incidence, and risk factors
Complications
Symptoms
Calling your health care provider
Signs and tests


Pelvic adhesions
Pelvic adhesions
Ovarian cyst
Ovarian cyst

 Definition  

Adhesions are bands of scar-like tissue that form between two surfaces inside the body.

 Alternative Names  

Pelvic adhesion; Intraperitoneal adhesion; Intrauterine adhesion

 Causes, incidence, and risk factors  

Inflammation, surgery, or injury can cause tissues to bond to other tissue or organs, much like the process of forming scar tissue. Sometimes, adhesions can form between the two surfaces. Abdominal surgery, endometriosis, attacks of appendicitis, or pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) can also cause adhesions.

Depending on the tissues involved, adhesions can cause various disorders. In the eye, adhesion of the iris to the lens can lead to glaucoma. In the intestines, adhesions can cause partial or complete bowel obstruction.

Adhesions inside the uterus are so common that they have a name of their own -- Asherman syndrome. Pelvic adhesions can lead to infertility and reproductive problems.

 Symptoms  

Symptoms depend on the disorder or event that caused the adhesion.

 Signs and tests  

Physical examination varies depending on the location of the adhesion. Various procedures, such as a laparoscopy for suspected pelvic adhesions, hysteroscopy, or hysterosalpingography, may be recommended.

 Treatment  

Surgery may be performed to separate the adhesions. This often allows normal movement of the organ and reduces the symptoms caused by the adhesion. However, the risk for more adhesions increases as the number of surgeries increases.

 Expectations (prognosis)  

The outcome is usually good.

 Complications  

Glaucoma, infertility, and bowel obstruction are possible complications of adhesions.

 Calling your health care provider  

Call your health care provider if you are experiencing abdominal pain, persistent nausea and vomiting, or unexplained fever.

Review date: 5/10/2006

Reviewed By: Melanie N. Smith, M.D., Ph.D., Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA. Review provided by VeriMed Healthcare Network.

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