Background: To compare the diagnostic value of hysteroscopy with conventional curettage and to evaluate the sensitivity of both methods to detect intrauterine endometrial pathology in patients with abnormal uterine bleeding.
patients and Methods: This prospective study carried on 100 patients underwent diagnostic hysteroscopy as well as dilatation and curettage for abnormal uterine bleeding in two teaching
hospitals, Al Yarmouk and Al Kadhmiya Teaching hospital / Baghdad from the period of Jan. 2002 to Dec. 2003, endometrial specimens were sent for separate histological study, the sensitivity of both methods were assessed according to the operative and histological findings.
Results: High sensitivity and positive predictive values of hysteroscopy and directed taken biopsy for almost all pathological causes of uterine bleeding except for atrophic endometrium (66.7%) and hyperplasia (33.1%). The sensitivity of dilatation and curettage is very low compared with hysteroscopy.
Conclusion: Hysteroscopy was more sensitive than dilatation and curettage in detecting endometrial polyp, submucuse fibroid, carcinoma but less sensitive than dilatation and curettage in detecting endometrial hyperplasia and atrophic endometrial . Hysteroscopy with directed biopsy taken provided high sensitivity in detecting pathological state of the endometrium.
Background: Alcohol remains the single most significant cause of liver disease throughout the Western world, responsible for between 40 and 80% of cases of cirrhosis in different countries. Many of the factors underlying the development of alcoholic liver injury remain unknown, and significant questions remain about the value of even very basic therapeutic strategies.
Patients and Methods: In a cross sectional study, 113 alcoholic patients with evidence of liver disease in the absence of other significant etiology attending the Gastoenterorology and Hepatology Teaching Hospital between December 2001 and December 2003 were studied for the hematological and biochemical spectrum of alcoholic liver disease in