Publications by authors named "Noor Abualnadi"

Article Synopsis
  • - Endometriosis can lead to issues like infertility, pelvic pain, and painful periods, and prior reports suggested that an 18F-fluoroestradiol (FES) tracer might help detect lesions using PET imaging.
  • - In a study involving 6 patients, FES was administered and then imaged using a specialized PET-MR scanner, with surgical exploration following as the diagnostic standard.
  • - The findings showed that PET was less sensitive than MR for identifying endometriosis lesions, and there was no significant correlation between tracer uptake and pain levels, indicating that FES PET-MR does not add value beyond standard MR imaging.
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Uterine fibroids are the most common benign neoplasm of the female pelvis and have a lifetime prevalence exceeding 80% among African American women and approaching 70% among Caucasian women. Approximately 50% of women with fibroids experience symptoms which can range from heavy menstrual bleeding and bulk-related symptoms such as pelvic pressure with bladder and bowel dysfunction to reproductive dysfunction (e.g.

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Study Objective: To assess the prevalence of myofascial pain in women undergoing uncomplicated, minimally invasive hysterectomy for chronic pelvic pain, to identify clinical and demographic factors associated with preoperative myofascial pain, and examine the association between myofascial pain and postoperative pain in hysterectomy patients.

Design: A retrospective cohort study.

Setting: A tertiary care teaching hospital.

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In this article, we describe a variety of medications that physicians managing outpatient chronic pain should familiarize themselves with to better aid their approach to multimodal pain therapy. Physicians should always consider the use of an adjuvant or coanalgesic drug as first-line treatments. Although many of these medications are not primarily analgesics, in clinical practice they have independent analgesic effects or synergistic analgesic properties when used with opioids.

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Acquired clitoral enlargement is a rare condition resulting from a variety of etiologies, including tumors and excess androgens. Few cases of nonmalignant schwannoma, a benign tumor of the peripheral nerve sheath, have been reported in the literature as causes of clitoral enlargement in patients without known neurofibromatosis. These painless, slow-growing tumors rarely recur once excised.

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