Treatment Overview
Untreated
pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) can produce scar
tissue (adhesions) that can cause
ongoing (chronic) pelvic pain,
ectopic pregnancy, and
infertility. This is why PID must be treated right
away, even if you have only one or two
signs of PID.1 This means
that you may be given antibiotic treatment before lab results have come back,
based on your medical history and a physical exam. This is because waiting
several days to treat you could raise your risks of fallopian tube damage and
infertility.4
Initial treatment
Antibiotic treatment for
pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) takes 14 days. Your
partner will also need treatment. Although you may feel better before the 2
weeks are up, be sure to finish taking the medication. If you don't, the
infection may return. You may also be able to use a
nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) to relieve
PID pain or discomfort.
Follow-up evaluations are important for making sure that
treatment is working. Close monitoring may be able to prevent complications,
such as chronic pelvic pain and infertility. Your health professional will want
to check you 2 to 3 days after you've started treatment, then 7 to 10 days
later. You will also have a checkup 4 to 6 weeks after treatment has ended, to
monitor your recovery.
What to think about
If you have an
intrauterine device (IUD) for birth control in place
and you develop PID, the IUD may need to be removed, depending on how severe
the infection is.1
Your health professional will recommend hospitalization if you
are pregnant, are very ill, are vomiting, may need surgery for a
tubo-ovarian abscess or
ectopic pregnancy (which can result from PID), or
aren't able to treat yourself at home.
Anyone with whom you have had sexual contact in the last 60
days should be evaluated and treated for
sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) to prevent
reinfection and passing infection on to someone else. Treatment for
gonorrhea or
chlamydia is not the same as treatment for PID.
Different antibiotics are sometimes prescribed for PID, and they are taken for
a longer period of time. Your partner will need to take antibiotics only for an
STD, not for PID.
To prevent reinfection, do not have sex until both you and your
sex partner(s) have completed antibiotic treatment (at least 14 days).
Ongoing treatment
If initial antibiotic treatment cures the infection that caused
pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), you will not need
ongoing treatment. However, it is important to make sure the infection is cured
by following up with your health professional.
Avoiding a
recurrent pelvic infection, particularly involving a
sexually transmitted disease (STD), is the key to preventing another episode of
PID. Regular condom use has been proven to reduce the risk of recurrent
PID.5 (Having repeat episodes of PID increases your
risks of tubal infertility,
chronic pelvic pain, and
ectopic pregnancy. For more information, see the
Prevention section of this topic.)
Treatment if the condition gets worse
Most cases of PID are cured with antibiotic therapy. Surgery is
not usually necessary to treat PID. However, surgery may be needed to:
- Drain or remove a pocket of infection (abscess).
- Cut scar tissue (adhesions) that is causing pain. (Surgery to remove
adhesions from pelvic inflammatory disease has not been proven to relieve pain
unless adhesions are severe.6)
Exploratory surgery is occasionally used when a diagnosis is
still unclear after other tests are done or when antibiotic treatment is not
working; diagnostic
laparoscopy (which involves using a small lighted
viewing instrument) is usually used.
What to think about
To avoid reinfection, it is critically important that you
and your sex partner(s) be treated.
After having PID, it's important that you have any further
pelvic symptoms checked promptly. Your health professional will want to examine
you for signs of another infection, possible pelvic organ damage (adhesions),
and other possible causes of your symptoms.