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Sonographic findings in acute puerperal endometritis: The hypoechoic rim sign and endomyometrial junction indistinctness
Author(s) -
Gillies Rohana,
Ashley Linda,
Bergin Colleen
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
australasian journal of ultrasound in medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2205-0140
pISSN - 1836-6864
DOI - 10.1002/ajum.12057
Subject(s) - medicine , endometritis , ultrasound , kappa , radiology , obstetrics , pregnancy , linguistics , philosophy , genetics , biology
Purpose To evaluate the accuracy of the sonographic subserosal hypoechoic rim sign and endomyometrial junctional indistinctness in identifying patients with acute endometritis during the puerperal period. Methods Radiologic coding identified the ultrasound scans of all patients presenting to Auckland City Hospital between January 2014 and February 2016 who were diagnosed clinically as having acute endometritis during the post‐partum or post‐abortion period. After exclusion criteria were applied, the ultrasound scans of 31 patients with acute endometritis and 32 healthy controls were randomised and anonymised. Images were reviewed retrospectively by two independent reviewers to identify the presence of these signs. Results The average sensitivity and specificity for readers identifying the subserosal hypoechoic rim sign in patients with acute endometritis were 71% and 92%, respectively. Interobserver reliability was good with an average kappa score of 0.63. Average sensitivity and specificity for endomyometrial junctional indistinctness were 79% and 72%, respectively, with good interobserver correlation (average kappa score 0.65). When both signs were either present or absent together, average sensitivity improved to 80.5% and average specificity was 91.7%. Conclusion We describe two new sonographic signs for puerperal endomyometritis that could improve the utility of ultrasound in the accurate and timely diagnosis of this condition.