Ultrasound Uterus Adnexa

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Ultrasound Uterus Adnexa
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Ultrasound Uterus Adnexa, in Visit Clinic

An imaging scan that pictures the uterus and nearby reproductive organs to find cysts, fibroids, pregnancy, or masses in Visit Clinic.

centreCentre Visit
SAMPLE TYPE
Tissue
FASTING REQUIRED
No
GENDER
Female
GET REPORTS IN
24 hours
TEST INCLUDED
1
Customers
20K+Customers
Labs
CertifiedLabs
Rating
4.5+Rating
Accuracy
ProvenAccuracy

What is a Ultrasound Uterus Adnexa Test in Visit Clinic?

An ultrasound of the uterus and adnexa is an imaging test that creates pictures of the uterus, ovaries, fallopian tubes, and nearby pelvic tissues. It does not measure a blood value. Instead it shows organ size, shape, fluid, cysts, and blood flow. It is important because it helps find causes of pelvic pain, unusual bleeding, infertility, and early pregnancy problems. Doctors use it to diagnose cysts, fibroids, ectopic pregnancy, infections, and some tumors. The images guide treatment choices, surgical planning, follow-up of known findings, and monitoring during early pregnancy.

Ultrasound Uterus Adnexa Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

Drink 1 liter water and do not urinate 1 hour before transabdominal scan

Ultrasound Uterus Adnexa Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The Ultrasound Uterus Adnexa test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a Ultrasound Uterus Adnexa Test in Visit Clinic?

Ultrasound Uterus Adnexa is usually ordered as a pelvic ultrasound, often with both transabdominal and transvaginal views. Doctors request it for pelvic pain, abnormal bleeding, infertility, suspected pregnancy complications, or to evaluate a pelvic mass. It helps diagnose cysts, fibroids, ectopic pregnancy, infection, and tumors. Abnormal findings can result from hormonal changes, pregnancy, infection, or tumors, and a family history of gynecologic cancers raises concern.

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Frequently asked questions

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What is the adnexa of the uterus ultrasound in Visit Clinic?plus

An adnexal ultrasound is a pelvic scan that images the uterine adnexa—the ovaries, fallopian tubes and nearby pelvic tissues—to identify cysts, masses, ectopic pregnancy, infection or pelvic fluid. It may be performed transabdominally or transvaginally (the latter gives higher resolution). Doppler assessment of blood flow can help distinguish benign from suspicious lesions and guide further management.

What is the normal size of the uterus and adnexa in Visit Clinic?plus

A normal non‑pregnant uterus is about 5–8 cm long, 3–5 cm wide and 2–3 cm thick (commonly cited ~7.5 × 5 × 2.5 cm), with a volume roughly 30–80 mL. Ovaries (adnexa) in premenopausal women are about 3 × 2 × 1.5 cm with volumes around 6–14 mL; postmenopausal ovaries are smaller, often ≤2.5 cm and <5–8 mL.

Why do we scan the adnexa in Visit Clinic?plus

We scan the adnexa to evaluate ovaries, fallopian tubes and surrounding tissues for causes of pelvic symptoms and reproductive problems. Imaging detects ovarian cysts and masses, ectopic pregnancy, adnexal torsion, pelvic inflammatory disease, endometriosis and malignancy; assesses blood flow and structural changes; and guides fertility evaluation, treatment planning and follow-up after surgery or therapy.

What is the difference between the uterus and the adnexa in Visit Clinic?plus

The uterus is the pear-shaped muscular organ in the pelvis that houses and supports pregnancy, sheds the lining during menstruation, and contracts during childbirth. The adnexa are the structures adjacent to the uterus—mainly the ovaries, fallopian tubes, and supporting ligaments and tissues—responsible for egg production, transport and hormonal function. Clinically, adnexal problems (cysts, ectopic pregnancy) differ from uterine conditions (fibroids, endometritis).

What is a normal adnexa in Visit Clinic?plus

Adnexa refers to the structures beside the uterus: the ovaries, fallopian tubes and supporting ligaments and tissues. Normal adnexa on exam or imaging show ovaries of appropriate size and shape for age with smooth contours and no suspicious cysts or masses, non‑dilated tubes, absence of abnormal pelvic fluid, and no signs of inflammation or localized tenderness.

Is the adnexa removed with a hysterectomy in Visit Clinic?plus

The adnexa (ovaries and fallopian tubes) are not always removed with a hysterectomy. A total hysterectomy removes the uterus and cervix; removing ovaries/tubes requires a salpingo-oophorectomy. Surgeons may remove one or both adnexa for cancer risk reduction, disease, or menopausal considerations. The choice depends on age, diagnosis, and patient preference, discussed before surgery.