| Literature DB >> 26380133 |
Balvinder Sagoo1, Ka Ying Bonnie Ng2, G Ghaleb3, Heather Brown3.
Abstract
We present a thirty-six-year-old woman with a high risk pregnancy, complicated by multiple congenital anomalies, severe hyperemesis, a pulmonary embolus, and a large intramural fibroid. This fibroid grew in size during the pregnancy. At 34 + 5 weeks, there were reduced fetal movements and a pathological CTG. A live infant was delivered by an emergency cesarean section. Five weeks postpartum, she presented with abdominal pain, offensive vaginal discharge, and fevers. She was given antibiotics and ferrous sulphate. An abdominal ultrasound showed an 11 × 12 × 9 cm fibroid with a coarse degenerative appearance. Clinically, she showed signs of sepsis; a CT scan and laparotomy performed under general anesthetic did not find any collections as a source of sepsis. When stable, she was discharged. She re-presented two days later with a large mass (necrotic fibroid) in her vagina. This is the first case of spontaneous expulsion of fibroid six weeks after caesarean section. Presentation of pain and fever after the delivery may be due to red degeneration of the fibroid, caused by diminished blood supply, ischaemia, and necrosis. This case highlights the importance of considering fibroids as a cause for abdominal pain during and after pregnancy, even up to 6 weeks after delivery.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26380133 PMCID: PMC4563065 DOI: 10.1155/2015/640570
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Obstet Gynecol ISSN: 2090-6692
Figure 1Large necrotic fibroid which was expelled with a long pedicle hanging from the uterine fundus, approximately six weeks after an emergency caesarean section.