Gynecologic Emergencies

Published on 26/03/2015 by admin

Filed under Emergency Medicine

Last modified 26/03/2015

Print this page

rate 1 star rate 2 star rate 3 star rate 4 star rate 5 star
Your rating: none, Average: 0 (0 votes)

This article have been viewed 1327 times

Chapter 36 Gynecologic Emergencies

9 A 3-year-old African-American girl presents to the ED with vaginal bleeding and a donut-shaped mass of purplish tissue protruding from her vagina. Her mother is concerned that she might have been abused. What’s your diagnosis?

Although sexual assault must always be in the differential diagnosis of genital trauma, the soft donut-shaped mass in this child is most likely not protruding from the vagina but rather is a urethral prolapse (Fig. 36-1). It is the most common cause of apparent vaginal bleeding in childhood, with the bleeding resulting from ischemia of the protruding urethral mucosa. For reasons that remain obscure, 95% of cases reported in the literature are in African-American girls. If the segment of prolapsed urethra is not necrotic, warm compresses or sitz baths in combination with 2 weeks of topical estrogen may be effective. Dark red necrotic mucosa requires surgical reduction of the prolapse within several days.