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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ten cases of abdominal pregnancy managed at the Brookdale Hospital Medical Center over a 17-year period are presented. An incidence of 1 abdominal pregnancy in 7095 deliveries occurred in this series; another institution reported 1 in 7931. A perinatal mortality rate of 80% and no maternal mortality in the study are contrasted to rates of 75 to 95% and 2 to 18%, respectively, from the world literature. Recurrent
abdominal pain
in the gravid patient with a prior history of infertility,
tubal pregnancy
, and/or surgery may signal abdominal pregnancy. Similarly, the management of fetal death should include consideration of the presence of abdominal pregnancy. The role of ultrasonography in diagnosis and the importance of immediate surgical intervention with minimal disturbance of the placenta are stressed.
...
PMID:Abdominal pregnancy: review of current management and addition of 10 cases. 715 82
A case of
tubal pregnancy
occurring 8 years after a modified Pomeroy's tubal sterilization is reported. The gross and microscopic findings of the resected tubes and the possible mode of recanalization are discussed. A 36 year old Thai woman, para 3-0-0-2, with her last para 8 years previously had puerperal tubal sterilization by modified Pomeroy's technique. The patient was seen at Ramathibodi Hospital on March 28, 1975 because of unimproved left lower
abdominal pain
for 1 week and a few days of vaginal spotting. She had been treated with antibiotics and analgesic previously. Her last normal menstrual period was in early March, 1975. Pelvic examination revealed pus-like, foul smelling vaginal discharge. Cervical excitation pain was positive. The uterine size was normal, deviated to the right side and slightly tender. A tender, ill-defined, soft cystic mass was palpable at the left adnexa extending to the left side of cul-de-sac. The right adnexa was normal. Exploratory laparotomy revealed that the left adnexal mass consisted of blood clots and a ruptured enlarged ampullar portion of the left tube. The left ovary was normal. At the isthmic portion of the left tube which had previously been resected, there was a constriction. The stumps of both cut ends of the right tube were well healed and widely separated. Left salpingo-oophorectomy was performed. The microscopic finding of the left ampulla was ectopic pregnancy. From serial sections of the constriction site of the left tube, there were multiple small lumina lined by low columnar epithelium surrounded by a thin layer of fibromuscular tissue.
...
PMID:Ectopic pregnancy after tubal sterilization. Mechanism of recanalization. A case report. 720 May 7
A prospective study was undertaken to evaluate possibility of expectant management of ectopic pregnancy in a selected group of patients with few symptoms, no gestational sac on sonography, and rising but low beta hCG levels. Using the above mentioned criteria, 26 patients were enrolled during prospective study period of 24 month. Five patients (19.2%) had a ruptured
tubal pregnancy
during the period of observation. Ten patients (38.5%) underwent laparoscopy with subsequent surgery for
tubal pregnancy
. The indication for laparoscopy in all 10 cases was
abdominal pain
. In all these 10 patients the pregnancy was unruptured. The remaining 11 patients (42.3%) escaped surgical intervention. Three had intrauterine pregnancies. In the remaining 8 patients the diagnosis remained presumed ectopic. The mean interval from admission of beta hCG level of < 5 mIU/ml in these 8 patients was 19.2 +/- 8.4 days. They were inpatients until the beta hCG level begun to decline. Thereafter, the patients were observed as outpatients. We conclude that in carefully selected cases of suspected ectopic pregnancies with rising but low beta hCG levels, expectant management is appropriate as long as the patient remains relatively asymptomatic.
...
PMID:Expectant management of suspected ectopic pregnancies even with rising beta-subunit human chorionic gonadotropin levels. A clinical prospective study. 752 7
Thirty-nine cases of ovarian pregnancy in our hospital from 1982 to 1992 were analyzed, and compared with the tubal pregnancies admitted during the same period. It showed that the incidence of ovarian pregnancy was 2.6% of all ectopic pregnancies with a trend to increase yearly. The clinical features of ovarian pregnancy revealed that
abdominal pain
was the major symptom, and history of amenorrhea was obscure. The clinical diagnosis of ovarian pregnancy was more difficult than that of
tubal pregnancy
. The typical histologic characteristics showed the embryo and chorionic villi surrounded by ovarian tissue or the presence of decidual changes. Ovarian pregnancy was closely related with poor uterine environment, pelvic inflammatory disease and/or endometriosis. The preferred therapeutic procedure was partial ovariectomy or wedge resection, preserving the normal ovarian tissue and tube as much as possible.
...
PMID:[A clinical study 39 cases of ovarian pregnancy]. 771 73
Sterilization by tubal occlusive methods is not always successful. This fact is not, however, well recognized among general surgeons. When failures occur, ectopic pregnancy is the usual outcome, most commonly in the Fallopian tube. Ectopic pregnancy has a reported mortality of approximately 3.5/1000, with the majority of deaths associated with delay in diagnosis. The failure to consider this possibility of ectopic pregnancy after tubal ligation when female patients present with right-sided
abdominal pain
causes health personnel to commonly misdiagnose the condition of appendicitis. A 26 year old woman presented to the Accident and Emergency Department of the Royal Hobart Hospital with lower
abdominal pain
mainly in the right iliac fossa. Pain was intermittent for two weeks prior to presentation. On the morning of presentation, the pain became severe and was exacerbated by coughing and movements. The patient was nauseated, but had not vomited; there was neither fever nor rigors. Four years earlier, in England, the patient had undergone elective laparoscopic sterilization. Sexually active, she believed that she was menstruating at the time of presentation, especially since her last menstruation occurred four weeks previously. The patient was noted upon examination to have a "grey look," pulse rate of 80 beats/minute, blood pressure of 120/80 mmHg, and a generally tender abdomen, maximally in the right iliac fossa. There were no bowel sounds and rectal examination proved to be extremely painful in all directions. The accident and emergency staff took blood for a full blood count, serum human chorionic gonadotrophin, and arranged surgical consultation. The surgical diagnosis was for acute appendicitis and the patient was transferred to the operating theater for appendectomy. Just prior to anesthetic induction, the pathology results became available, indicating a hemoglobin of 10.3 g/dl and a positive serum HCG. The diagnosis was thus revised to ruptured ectopic pregnancy and laparotomy was performed through a Pfannenstiel incision. 1000 ml of blood was removed from the peritoneal cavity, a ruptured
tubal pregnancy
was found in the right distal tube, and the appendix was normal. A right salpingo-oophorectomy was performed after which the patient recovered uneventfully and was discharged five days postoperatively. Histopathology confirmed a ruptured ectopic gestation.
...
PMID:Misdiagnosis of appendicitis in tubally sterilized women. 846 65
The prospective controlled study investigated the concentrations of free beta-human chorionic gonadotrophin (HCG) subunit in 554 women with a singleton intrauterine or
tubal pregnancy
. They presented with vaginal bleeding and/or
abdominal pain
in the first 18 weeks of pregnancy. The control group comprised 156 women with musculoskeletal pain and no vaginal bleeding. Their pregnancies continued to term. The study group comprised 398 women (141 threatened-continuing pregnancies, 37 threatened-miscarriages, 185 non-continuing pregnancies and 35 tubal pregnancies). Free beta-HCG concentrations were significantly lower in the non-continuing, threatened-miscarriage and
tubal pregnancy
groups [mean 4.62, 6.50 and 4.27 ng/ml respectively; 95% confidence interval (CI) 3.75-5.69, 4.46-9.48 and 2.92-6.2 respectively] than in the control and threatened-continuing groups (mean 41.61 and 48.22 ng/ml respectively; 95% CI 34.53-50.13 and 42.03-55.32 respectively) (P < 0.001 in all cases). A cut-off value at 20 ng/ml was found to differentiate between the 'viable' (control and threatened-continuing) and the 'abnormal' (non-continuing, threatened-miscarriage and tubal) pregnancies, with 88.3% sensitivity and 82.6% positive predictive value. An excellent diagnostic and prognostic usability of free beta HCG was confirmed by a receiver operating characteristic curve plot. In conclusion, a single serum free beta-HCG measurement taken in early pregnancy is valuable in the immediate diagnosis of early pregnancy failure and the long-term prognosis of viability.
...
PMID:The role of a single free beta-human chorionic gonadotrophin measurement in the diagnosis of early pregnancy failure and the prognosis of fetal viability. 867 45
Chronic ectopic pregnancy is an uncommon form of
tubal pregnancy
manifested as a pelvic mass with minimal symptoms and a low or absent titer of human chorionic gonadotropin. For this reason, most of the reported cases have been diagnosed only after explorative laparotomy. The value of Doppler ultrasonography for preoperative diagnosis of this entity has not yet been established. We report on a 36-year-old patient who was admitted for intermittent right lower quadrant
abdominal pain
of 3 months' duration, and a right adnexal mass found on pelvic examination. On Doppler ultrasonography, a right complex adnexal mass was demonstrated, characterized by extensive external vascularization, aberrant vessels and arteriovenous shunting, but with no internal blood flow. Explorative laparotomy revealed a right tubal mass adherent to the omentum, and covered by numerous enlarged and tortuous blood vessels originating in the omentum. Pathological examination of the mass revealed a chronic ectopic pregnancy. The possible contribution of Doppler-specific characteristics for the diagnosis of chronic ectopic pregnancy is described and discussed.
...
PMID:Doppler findings in chronic ectopic pregnancy: case report. 920 79
A 27 year old woman had a three day history of pain in the cutaneous distribution of the left obturator nerve before she developed the classical picture of ectopic pregnancy with lower
abdominal pain
and vaginal bleeding. A left
tubal pregnancy
was subsequently confirmed by laparoscopy. Referred pain along the obturator nerve has been reported in other pelvic conditions, but has not previously been reported as a manifestation of ectopic pregnancy. Ectopic pregnancy may present with a very wide range of signs and symptoms and should be excluded in females of child bearing age with unexplained symptoms including pain anywhere from the shoulder down to the knee.
...
PMID:Ectopic pregnancy presenting with obturator nerve pain. 963 86
We report a case of combined intrauterine and
tubal pregnancy
in a 23-year-old woman. The patient came to the emergency department complaining of lower
abdominal pain
after having had an elective abortion 2 weeks earlier. Her physician had done pelvic ultrasonography, noting an intrauterine pregnancy before the abortion. Our working diagnosis in the emergency department was retained products of conception versus postabortion endometritis. Pelvic ultrasonography in the emergency department revealed an ectopic pregnancy without evidence of retained products of conception, and the patient had a right salpingotomy with removal of the ectopic fetus without complications.
...
PMID:Heterotopic pregnancy: discovery of ectopic pregnancy after elective abortion. 1009 79
Assisted reproductive techniques (ART) are widely accepted procedures for infertile couples. Rare complications, like heterotopic pregnancy, bilateral
tubal pregnancy
, and adnexal torsion during pregnancy, have been diagnosed with increasing frequency after ART. We present a case of an early triplet pregnancy complicated with adnexal torsion. The patient was pregnant through in vitro fertilization. Early ultrasound examination revealed a triplet pregnancy within the uterine cavity. At 7 weeks' gestational age, an acute onset of lower
abdominal pain
, progressive abdominal distension, and massive internal bleeding prompted emergency laparotomy. The right ovary was enlarged, twisted, necrotic and hemorrhagic. Attempts to preserve the ovary failed because of the friable nature of the affected ovary, and an oophorectomy had to be performed. Although the removed ovary contained a corpus luteum, the pregnancy continued smoothly after only short luteal support. A precise pre-surgery diagnosis in our case was difficult based on the patient's initial clinical presentation. However, with high clinical suspicion in addition to color Doppler ultrasound, the physician should be able to make an early decision for an exploratory laparotomy or laparoscopy, gaining the benefit of more conservative treatment.
...
PMID:Multiple pregnancy with adnexal torsion after in vitro fertilization: case report. 1090 32
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