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Vaginocervical cytology in victims of sexual assault

โœ Scribed by Michael J. Costa; Talaat Tadros; Eva Tackett; Zuher Naib


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1991
Tongue
English
Weight
421 KB
Volume
7
Category
Article
ISSN
8755-1039

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

โœฆ Synopsis


To investigate the role of vaginocervical smears in alleged victims of rape, we reviewed thejndings in 4,220 consecutive rape victims between the years 1982 and 1989. These rape victims showed a slight increase in cellular abnormalities (1.18% vs. .93%) when compared to a group of 17,187 routine smears from an indigent population in 1989. While the differences in the spectrum of cellular abnormalities were not statistically signi$cant, the increase in abnormal smears is remarkable because of the younger age distribution and lower risk factors for cervical cancer in this group of rape victims (41 % of the victims were never seen at our institution before their evaluation for alleged rape and were most probably of higher socioeconomic status and at lower risk for cervical cancer than the indigent population served at our hospital). This finding may reflect the low incidence of vaginocervical cytology screening among the general population of which rape victims are a random sample. Fgty-seven percent of the rape victims with cellular abnormalities who were also regular patients at our hospital returned for follow-up by appropriate repeat smears or biopsies. This was lower than the 95% general follow-up rate of vaginocervicalsmear abnormalities among the rest of the population screened at our hospital. We detected spermatozoa in 56% of the smears from victims who were examined within three days of the alleged sexual assault. Cytology adds to the criminal investigation of rape cases as we detected spermatozoa in four of 16 semen-negative cases from a random sample of 53 cases evaluated by the state crime lab.


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