Definitions of the grades of the recommendations (A, B, C) and levels of evidence (I, II, III) are provided at the end of the "Major Recommendations" field.
General Recommendations for Diagnostic Laparoscopy
Diagnostic laparoscopy (DL) is a safe and well tolerated procedure that can be performed in an inpatient or outpatient setting under general or occasionally local anesthesia with intravenous sedation in carefully selected patients. DL should be performed by physicians trained in laparoscopic techniques who can recognize and treat common complications and can perform additional therapeutic procedures when indicated. During the procedure, the patient should be continuously monitored, and resuscitation capability must be immediately available. Laparoscopy must be performed using sterile technique along with meticulous disinfection of the laparoscopic equipment. Overnight observation may be appropriate in some outpatients.
DL for Pelvic Pain and Endometriosis
Technique
The procedure can be employed under general anesthesia or conscious sedation. The latter approach must be used with the technique of conscious pain mapping during which the patient can respond to intraperitoneal manipulations that may identify the source of pain. Smaller trocars and lower pneumoperitoneum pressures should be used with this technique to decrease the operative pain.
The patient is placed in the lithotomy position. The initial access site is usually peri-umbilical. Additional trocars can be placed in the left lower or right lower quadrant. A manipulator can be placed on the cervix and a rectal probe can be used if necessary for further retraction; these instruments are usually not used during conscious sedation.
During the procedure, identified adhesions are divided, and lesions suspected to be endometriosis should be biopsied and classified. In the absence of visible endometriosis lesions, random biopsies may demonstrate endometriosis in 30% of patients with typical symptoms. Free peritoneal fluid should be sampled and examined for the presence of endometriosis. Endometriosis lesions can then be fulgurated or removed.
Indications
Chronic pelvic pain of unknown etiology after appropriate noninvasive workup.
Recommendations
DL can be safely applied in the diagnosis of chronic pelvic pain (Grade B). The procedure may identify the etiology of chronic pelvic pain in a proportion of patients, and its diagnostic accuracy may be improved by the technique of conscious pain mapping (Grade B). Nevertheless, the existing evidence does not allow firm recommendations, and further research is needed to establish the value of DL for chronic pelvic pain (Grade B).
For details of the rationale for the procedure and its diagnostic accuracy, see the original guideline document.
Definitions:
Levels of Evidence
Level I |
Evidence from properly conducted randomized, controlled trials |
Level II |
Evidence from controlled trials without randomization
Or
Cohort of case-control studies
Or
Multiple time series, dramatic uncontrolled experiments
|
Level III |
Descriptive case series, opinions of expert panels |
Scale Used for Recommendation Grading
Grade A |
Based on high-level (level I or II), well-performed studies with uniform interpretation and conclusions by the expert panel |
Grade B |
Based on high-level, well-performed studies with varying interpretation and conclusions by the expert panel |
Grade C |
Based on lower-level evidence (level II or less) with inconsistent findings and/or varying interpretations or conclusions by the expert panel |