Ovarian torsion: Difference between revisions

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==Background==
==Background==
*Occurs in females of all ages (most common in reproductive age women)
*Rotation of the ovary around its vascular pedicle (infundibulopelvic and utero-ovarian ligaments)
*Ovarian cysts (usually > 5 mm) and neoplasms account for 94% of cases in adults
*Compromises venous/lymphatic drainage first → edema → eventual arterial compromise → ischemia and necrosis
**Account for only 50% in children (much more likely to torse normal ovaries)
*'''5th most common gynecologic emergency'''
 
*Accounts for ~3% of all gynecologic emergencies
===Pathophysiology===
*Most common in reproductive-age women (20-40 years)
* cysts greater than 4cm more likely to torse
*Risk factors:
*dual ovation blood supply so even if flow negative but significant pain still consider as diagnosis
**Ovarian mass >5 cm (most common risk factor; dermoid cysts particularly prone)
**sonographer should document dual arterial and venous waveforms
**Ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (fertility treatment)
**Pregnancy (especially first trimester; corpus luteum cysts)
**Prior tubal ligation (increases ovarian mobility)
**Long utero-ovarian ligament
*Right side more common than left (sigmoid colon may limit left ovarian mobility)
*Can occur in prepubertal girls (often without predisposing mass — normal ovary)


==Clinical Features==
==Clinical Features==
*[[Nausea/vomiting]] (70%)
*Sudden onset, severe, unilateral lower abdominal/pelvic pain (most common presentation)
*Sudden and sharp pain in the lower abdomen (59%)
*Pain may be intermittent (intermittent torsion/detorsion)
** can be intermittent
*Nausea and vomiting (present in 70% — may be prominent)
*[[Fever]] (<2%)
*Low-grade [[fever]] (late finding suggesting necrosis)
*Adnexal tenderness on bimanual exam; palpable adnexal mass in ~50%
*May mimic [[appendicitis]], [[renal colic]], or [[ectopic pregnancy]]
*Peritoneal signs are late and suggest necrosis
*In children: may present with non-specific abdominal pain


==Differential Diagnosis==
==Differential Diagnosis==
{{Abd DDX RLQ}}
*[[Ectopic pregnancy]] (always obtain pregnancy test first)
*Ruptured [[ovarian cyst]]
*[[Appendicitis]]
*[[Renal colic]] / [[nephrolithiasis]]
*[[Pelvic inflammatory disease]] / [[tubo-ovarian abscess]]
*[[Endometriosis]]
*[[Testicular torsion]] (analogous condition)
*Hemorrhagic corpus luteum
 
{{Pelvic pain DDX}}
 
==Evaluation==
*Urine pregnancy test (rule out [[ectopic pregnancy]])
*CBC: leukocytosis may be present (nonspecific)
*Urinalysis: rule out [[UTI]], [[nephrolithiasis]]
*Lactate: may be elevated in late presentations
 
===Transvaginal Ultrasound (Test of Choice)===
*Enlarged ovary (>4 cm) compared to contralateral side
*Ovarian edema (heterogeneous appearance)
*Peripherally displaced follicles ("string of pearls" sign)
*Whirlpool sign on Doppler: twisted vascular pedicle (most specific finding)
*Free fluid in cul-de-sac
 
====Doppler Findings====
*Absent or decreased ovarian arterial/venous flow supports diagnosis
*HOWEVER: presence of Doppler flow does NOT exclude torsion<ref>Shadinger LL, et al. Surgically treated adnexal torsion: does the presence of doppler flow predict viability? ''J Ultrasound Med''. 2008;27(5):687-691. PMID 18424640</ref>
**Sensitivity of absent flow is only ~50% — dual blood supply (ovarian and uterine arteries)
**Intermittent torsion may show normal flow between episodes
*If high clinical suspicion, proceed to OR despite normal Doppler


{{LLQ DDX}}
===CT Abdomen/Pelvis===
*May show enlarged ovary, fat stranding, deviation of uterus toward affected side
*Less sensitive than US for torsion but may identify alternative diagnoses
*"Ovarian mass with surrounding fat stranding" on CT should raise concern


==Diagnosis==
==Management==
*[[Ultrasound]] (sensitivity 46-70%)
*Emergent gynecology consultation for operative intervention
**Diminished or absent blood flow in the ovarian vessels
*Time-sensitive — ovarian salvage rates decrease with prolonged ischemia
**Ovarian mass > 2.5-3 cm
**Detorsion within 6 hours: high salvage rate
**Loss of echogenicity
**Detorsion at 24-36 hours: viable ovary still possible
**Edema
**'''Do not assume a black/dusky ovary is nonviable''' — most recover after detorsion
**Free fluid
*Laparoscopic detorsion is procedure of choice (preserves fertility)
*CT may be used to r/o other possible causes of lower abdominal pain; also exclude presence of pelvic mass
*Oophoropexy (fixation) may be performed to prevent recurrence
*Gold standard: direct visualization!
*Oophorectomy reserved for clearly necrotic tissue or suspected malignancy
*Supportive care in ED:
**IV fluids, antiemetics (ondansetron 4 mg IV)
**Pain control: ketorolac 15-30 mg IV and/or opioids
**NPO for OR preparation


==Treatment==
==Disposition==
*Emergent OB/GYN consult in ED
*Admit for emergent surgical intervention
*'''Do NOT delay surgery for additional imaging''' if clinical suspicion is high
*Consult gynecology early — even if US is equivocal, operative evaluation may be warranted


==See Also==
==See Also==
*[[Abdominal pain]]
*[[Ovarian cyst]]
*[[Ectopic pregnancy]]
*[[Testicular torsion]]
*[[Pelvic pain]]
*[[Appendicitis]]


==References==
==References==
<references/>
*Huchon C, Fauconnier A. Adnexal torsion: a literature review. ''Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Biol''. 2010;150(1):8-12. PMID 20189289
*Chang HC, et al. Pearls and pitfalls in diagnosis of ovarian torsion. ''Radiographics''. 2008;28(5):1355-1368. PMID 18794312
*Houry D, Abbott JT. Ovarian torsion: a fifteen-year review. ''Ann Emerg Med''. 2001;38(2):156-159. PMID 11468611
*Oelsner G, Shashar D. Adnexal torsion. ''Clin Obstet Gynecol''. 2006;49(3):459-463. PMID 16885652


[[Category:OB/GYN]]
[[Category:OBGYN]]

Latest revision as of 09:35, 22 March 2026

Background

  • Rotation of the ovary around its vascular pedicle (infundibulopelvic and utero-ovarian ligaments)
  • Compromises venous/lymphatic drainage first → edema → eventual arterial compromise → ischemia and necrosis
  • 5th most common gynecologic emergency
  • Accounts for ~3% of all gynecologic emergencies
  • Most common in reproductive-age women (20-40 years)
  • Risk factors:
    • Ovarian mass >5 cm (most common risk factor; dermoid cysts particularly prone)
    • Ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (fertility treatment)
    • Pregnancy (especially first trimester; corpus luteum cysts)
    • Prior tubal ligation (increases ovarian mobility)
    • Long utero-ovarian ligament
  • Right side more common than left (sigmoid colon may limit left ovarian mobility)
  • Can occur in prepubertal girls (often without predisposing mass — normal ovary)

Clinical Features

  • Sudden onset, severe, unilateral lower abdominal/pelvic pain (most common presentation)
  • Pain may be intermittent (intermittent torsion/detorsion)
  • Nausea and vomiting (present in 70% — may be prominent)
  • Low-grade fever (late finding suggesting necrosis)
  • Adnexal tenderness on bimanual exam; palpable adnexal mass in ~50%
  • May mimic appendicitis, renal colic, or ectopic pregnancy
  • Peritoneal signs are late and suggest necrosis
  • In children: may present with non-specific abdominal pain

Differential Diagnosis

Acute Pelvic Pain

Differential diagnosis of acute pelvic pain

Gynecologic/Obstetric

Genitourinary

Gastrointestinal

Musculoskeletal

Vascular

Evaluation

  • Urine pregnancy test (rule out ectopic pregnancy)
  • CBC: leukocytosis may be present (nonspecific)
  • Urinalysis: rule out UTI, nephrolithiasis
  • Lactate: may be elevated in late presentations

Transvaginal Ultrasound (Test of Choice)

  • Enlarged ovary (>4 cm) compared to contralateral side
  • Ovarian edema (heterogeneous appearance)
  • Peripherally displaced follicles ("string of pearls" sign)
  • Whirlpool sign on Doppler: twisted vascular pedicle (most specific finding)
  • Free fluid in cul-de-sac

Doppler Findings

  • Absent or decreased ovarian arterial/venous flow supports diagnosis
  • HOWEVER: presence of Doppler flow does NOT exclude torsion[2]
    • Sensitivity of absent flow is only ~50% — dual blood supply (ovarian and uterine arteries)
    • Intermittent torsion may show normal flow between episodes
  • If high clinical suspicion, proceed to OR despite normal Doppler

CT Abdomen/Pelvis

  • May show enlarged ovary, fat stranding, deviation of uterus toward affected side
  • Less sensitive than US for torsion but may identify alternative diagnoses
  • "Ovarian mass with surrounding fat stranding" on CT should raise concern

Management

  • Emergent gynecology consultation for operative intervention
  • Time-sensitive — ovarian salvage rates decrease with prolonged ischemia
    • Detorsion within 6 hours: high salvage rate
    • Detorsion at 24-36 hours: viable ovary still possible
    • Do not assume a black/dusky ovary is nonviable — most recover after detorsion
  • Laparoscopic detorsion is procedure of choice (preserves fertility)
  • Oophoropexy (fixation) may be performed to prevent recurrence
  • Oophorectomy reserved for clearly necrotic tissue or suspected malignancy
  • Supportive care in ED:
    • IV fluids, antiemetics (ondansetron 4 mg IV)
    • Pain control: ketorolac 15-30 mg IV and/or opioids
    • NPO for OR preparation

Disposition

  • Admit for emergent surgical intervention
  • Do NOT delay surgery for additional imaging if clinical suspicion is high
  • Consult gynecology early — even if US is equivocal, operative evaluation may be warranted

See Also

References

  1. Norris DL, Young JD. UTI. EM Clin N Am. 2008; 26:413-30.
  2. Shadinger LL, et al. Surgically treated adnexal torsion: does the presence of doppler flow predict viability? J Ultrasound Med. 2008;27(5):687-691. PMID 18424640
  • Huchon C, Fauconnier A. Adnexal torsion: a literature review. Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Biol. 2010;150(1):8-12. PMID 20189289
  • Chang HC, et al. Pearls and pitfalls in diagnosis of ovarian torsion. Radiographics. 2008;28(5):1355-1368. PMID 18794312
  • Houry D, Abbott JT. Ovarian torsion: a fifteen-year review. Ann Emerg Med. 2001;38(2):156-159. PMID 11468611
  • Oelsner G, Shashar D. Adnexal torsion. Clin Obstet Gynecol. 2006;49(3):459-463. PMID 16885652