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Query: UMLS:C0027960 (
mole
)
21,279
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A case of twin pregnancy combining a complete
mole
and a normal pregnancy is reported. A spontaneously aborted partial triploid
mole
was found in the past medical history of the patient. Prenatal investigations showed an heterogenous mass suggestive of a trophoblastic disorder coexisting with a normal placenta and a morphologically normal fetus on sonography associated with increased levels of hCG and normal levels of AFP in the maternal serum. High-resolution color Doppler imaging showed no blood flow within the suspect mass, excluding a myoma in necrobiosis or a large placental
chorioangioma
. The patient did not presented the severe complications classically described in classical
mole
and a passive conservative attitude was adopted. The pregnancy ended prematurely and the patient delivered at 27 weeks of gestation of a phenotypically normal infant. The mother and the baby had an unremarkable post-partum course. The review of the recent literature showed that partial hydatidiform mole could be separated in four categories: triploid partial moles; twin pregnancies combining a complete
mole
and a normal pregnancy; diploid partial
mole
; and pseudo-moles. Detailed sonographic examination and evaluation of maternal serum hCG and AFP should allow prenatal differential diagnosis of these pathological entities.
...
PMID:[Prenatal diagnosis of molar pathologies coexisting with a fetus. Review of the recent literature and a case report]. 170 73
We here report a case of placental vascular malformation with mesenchymal hyperplasia of the villi and a localized
chorioangioma
. After an uneventful pregnancy our patient delivered a non-malformed live female infant. The placenta was grossly enlarged, and macroscopically it was characterized by strongly enlarged varicous chorionic vessels. On the maternal plate vesicle-like structures, giving the impression of partial
mole
, were seen. At microscopy level, areas of normal looking tissue alternated with areas of excessively enlarged villi, in which the ground substance contained large amounts of acid mucopolysaccharide, corresponding to "mesenchymal hyperplasia". Moreover, a localized
chorioangioma
was found. In none of the histological sections were cisterns, abnormal trophoblastic proliferation, stunted ramification or stromal trophoblastic inclusions observed. In week 15 maternal se-AFP was elevated to 3.03 multiples of the median. Genetic analyses revealed a normal female karyotype and biparental genomic contributions to 7 unlinked loci. Placental vascular malformation with mesenchymal hyperplasia is a differential diagnosis to partial
mole
which should be considered when vesicle like placental enlargement is observed along with a living fetus.
...
PMID:Placental vascular malformation with mesenchymal hyperplasia and a localized chorioangioma. A rarity simulating partial mole. 783 Nov 58
Six new cases of placental mesenchymal dysplasia are presented and the findings compared to those reported in 16 similar cases published in the literature. Mesenchymal dysplasia was suspected when a placental scan showed a partial
mole
with a fetus of normal size and normal karyotype. Three fetuses of this series and nine out of 18 cases from the literature review also presented with Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome features. This placental anomaly is more commonly associated with a 46,XX karyotype. Comparable placental histopathological features in cases of mesenchymal dysplasia with or without congenital anomalies diagnostic of Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome suggest that in some of these cases the overgrowth of specific fetal tissue is limited to the placenta and the fetus remains unaffected. Histological similarity between mesenchymal dysplasia and cellular
chorioangioma
suggests a common embryologic origin for both these placental abnormalities. Ultrasound/Doppler serial investigations indicate that the circulatory imbalance is due to hypovascularization of the dysplastic lobules, found in mesenchymal dysplasia. This induces the progressive aneurysmal and varicose dilatation of chorionic vessels, however, these anatomical transformations are not associated with a change in resistance to flow in both uterine and umbilical circulations nor with an excess of obstetrical complication when the fetus is anatomically normal.
...
PMID:Perinatal features associated with placental mesenchymal dysplasia. 936 6
Maurice Panigel demonstrated by X-rays, almost 40 years ago, placental maternal blood jets in non-human primates. Although to researchers the importance of the placenta is evident, in clinical obstetrical imaging, the fetus takes precedence. The placenta is imaged almost as an after thought and mostly to determine its location in the uterus. In animal species, the placenta was imaged with techniques which would be considered too invasive (or too costly for routine use) in humans, many pioneered by Panigel: radioangiography, radioisotopes scintigraphy, thermography, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and spectroscopy, positive emission tomography (PET) and single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT). Ultrasound allows for detailed, and, as far as is known, safe analyses of not only placental structure in the human but also its function. Earlier, only 2-dimensional grey-scale was available and more than 20 years ago, placental grading was popular. Later, colour imaging and spectral Doppler analysis of blood velocity both in the umbilical artery and within the placenta as well as the uterus and fetal vessels became essential and, more recently, the use of ultrasound contrast agents has been described, albeit not yet in a clinical setting. Three-dimensional ultrasound permits evaluation of the placenta in several planes, more precise depiction of internal vasculature as well as more accurate volume assessment. Several medical disorders of the pregnant woman or her fetus begin or end in the placenta, and ultrasound is the optimal investigation method. Obvious examples include pre-eclampsia and other forms of hypertension in pregnancy, less than optimal fetal growth (i.e. intrauterine growth restriction), triploidy (and its placental manifestation: partial
mole
), non-immune hydrops as well as several infectious processes. Ultrasound is also particularly suited to evaluate specific placental conditions, such as abnormal placentation (placenta previa and accrete for instance), gestational trophoblastic disease and placental tumors (e.g.
chorioangioma
).
...
PMID:In utero imaging of the placenta: importance for diseases of pregnancy. 1738 21