Pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) is an infection-driven inflammatory process of the female upper genital tract — typically involving the endometrium, fallopian tubes, and surrounding pelvic structures. Silent in some, devastating in others, PID can steal fertility, cause chronic pelvic pain, and seed life-threatening complications if left unchecked. Understanding its causes, clinical cues, and prompt management is key to preserving reproductive health.
🔄 Overview of PID
PID is most commonly caused by ascending sexually transmitted pathogens (notably Chlamydia trachomatis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae) and polymicrobial vaginal flora. Infection ascends from the cervix to the endometrium, fallopian tubes (salpingitis), ovaries, and peritoneum, producing inflammation, scarring, and potential abscess formation.
Core Features
- Definition: Infection/inflammation of upper genital tract
- Common pathogens: C. trachomatis, N. gonorrhoeae, anaerobes
- Sites: Endometritis, salpingitis, oophoritis, tubo-ovarian abscess
- Consequences: Scarring, infertility, chronic pain
Epidemiology
- Prevalence: Common in sexually active women; often underdiagnosed
- Age: Highest risk: adolescents & women <25 years
- Risk Factors: Multiple partners, new partner, prior STI/PID, IUD insertion (recent)
- Public health: Important target for STI control programs
🧬 Pathophysiology: Ascending Infection and Scarring
PID starts at the cervix and ascends. Pathogen-induced inflammation of the fallopian tubes causes mucosal damage, exudate, and adhesions that narrow or block the lumen — the key mechanism behind infertility and ectopic pregnancy. Severe infections can lead to tubo-ovarian abscesses and peritonitis.
Ascending Pathway
- Initial cervicitis → ascend to uterus and tubes
- Bacterial virulence and host immunity determine severity
- Polymicrobial environment often involved
Tube Injury & Adhesion
- Inflammation → loss of ciliated epithelium
- Fibrosis and adhesions → tubal occlusion or distortion
- Impaired ovum transport → infertility/ectopic pregnancy
Complications: Abscess & Spread
- Tubo-ovarian abscess formation
- Peritonitis and systemic sepsis in severe cases
- Chronic pelvic pain from persistent adhesions
💧 Clinical Features: From Mild Discomfort to Severe Sepsis
Presentation ranges widely — acute PID with fever and severe pain, to subacute or chronic pelvic pain with subtle signs. High clinical suspicion is essential, especially in sexually active women with lower abdominal pain and abnormal vaginal bleeding or discharge.
Typical Manifestations
Common Symptoms
- Lower abdominal/pelvic pain (often bilateral)
- Abnormal vaginal discharge (purulent)
- Fever, dyspareunia, dysuria
Exam Findings
- Cervical motion tenderness (Chandelier sign)
- Uterine/adnexal tenderness
- Possible palpable adnexal mass (abscess)
🔬 Diagnosis: Clinical Judgment + Targeted Tests
PID is primarily a clinical diagnosis. Laboratory tests and imaging support the diagnosis and identify complications. Because delayed treatment risks long-term sequelae, empiric therapy is recommended when PID is suspected clinically.
| Test | Purpose | Findings |
|---|---|---|
| Clinical criteria | Immediate diagnostic basis | Lower abdominal pain + adnexal, uterine, or cervical motion tenderness |
| NAAT (vaginal/cervical/urine) | Detect chlamydia/gonorrhoea | Positive C. trachomatis or N. gonorrhoeae |
| Inflammatory markers | Assess systemic response | Elevated CRP, ESR, ± leukocytosis |
| Pelvic ultrasound | Rule out abscess, alternate pathology | Tubo-ovarian abscess, hydrosalpinx, free fluid |
| Endometrial biopsy / laparoscopy | Used if diagnosis uncertain or severe/recurrent | Direct visualization or histology of infection |
🎯 Management & Treatment
Therapy must be prompt, broad-spectrum, and cover likely pathogens including gonococcus, chlamydia, anaerobes, gram-negatives, and streptococci. Choose outpatient or inpatient regimens based on severity, ability to tolerate oral meds, and presence of abscess or sepsis.
Outpatient Regimen (examples)
- Ceftriaxone IM single dose PLUS doxycycline 14 days ± metronidazole
- Ensure partner notification and treatment
- Follow-up within 48–72 hours to confirm improvement
Inpatient Regimen (examples)
- IV cefoxitin or cefotetan PLUS doxycycline (for severe disease/abscess)
- Surgical drainage for ruptured or refractory tubo-ovarian abscess
- Supportive care: fluids, analgesia, and monitoring
Adjuncts & Prevention
- Treat sexual partners to prevent reinfection
- Address contraception—counsel on IUD timing if recently inserted
- Education on STI prevention and safer sex practices
Follow-up
- Reassess clinically within 48–72 hours; if no improvement, consider admission and imaging
- Repeat NAAT at 3 months to confirm clearance for chlamydia
- Fertility counseling if tubal involvement suspected
⚠️ Complications & Prognosis
Early treatment improves outcomes, but PID can leave lasting damage. The risk of sequelae rises with recurrent episodes and delayed therapy.
- Short-term: Tubo-ovarian abscess, peritonitis, sepsis
- Long-term: Chronic pelvic pain, infertility, ectopic pregnancy (due to tubal scarring)
- Recurrence: Reinfection and repeated PID increase cumulative damage
🧠 Key Takeaways
- PID is an ascending infection of the upper genital tract often caused by STIs and polymicrobial vaginal flora.
- Clinical diagnosis is pivotal—cervical motion tenderness plus pelvic pain warrants empiric therapy.
- Prompt, broad-spectrum antibiotics and partner treatment reduce long-term sequelae.
- Complications include tubo-ovarian abscess, chronic pelvic pain, infertility and ectopic pregnancy.
- Prevention through STI control and sexual health education is essential for reproductive health.
🧭 Conclusion
Pelvic inflammatory disease remains a leading preventable cause of infertility and chronic pelvic pain worldwide. Its insidious nature — often beginning with asymptomatic STIs — calls for vigilance: screening, early recognition, and decisive treatment. By treating infections early, ensuring partner therapy, and promoting sexual health, clinicians can halt the ascending tide of inflammation and preserve future fertility.
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease is an infection that climbs — catch it early, treat broadly, and protect the reproductive future.