| Literature DB >> 35321265 |
Merve Ozen1, Evan Birmingham2, Mark Hoffman3, Driss Raissi1.
Abstract
Abdominal pregnancy is a rare but life-threatening variation of ectopic pregnancy that is often treated with laparoscopic management; however, we present a case successfully treated using only minimally invasive techniques. A 36-year-old female G1P0 with a history of infertility is diagnosed with 11-weeks abdominal pregnancy by transvaginal ultrasound. She presented with vaginal bleeding and abdominal pain, and her beta-human chorionic gonadotropin was 53,680 mIU/mL. The location of the fetal sac was not amenable to surgery or percutaneous injection. We performed bilateral uterine artery embolization and subsequent intramuscular methotrexate injection. The procedure was successful with no complications. The patient was followed at postoperative week 11, and beta-human chorionic gonadotropin was 2 mIU/mL, and at 3 months, a transvaginal ultrasound revealed resolution of the abdominal pregnancy.Entities:
Keywords: Abdominal; Ectopic; Embolization; Pregnancy; UAE; Uterine artery
Year: 2022 PMID: 35321265 PMCID: PMC8935341 DOI: 10.1016/j.radcr.2022.02.040
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiol Case Rep ISSN: 1930-0433
Fig. 1(A) Coronal T2-weighted MRI of the pelvis reveals gestational sac within the rectouterine pouch (arrow). (B) DSA image of the distal left uterine artery demonstrating vascularity of the abdominal pregnancy (arrow).
Fig. 2(A) Post-embolization ultrasound indicating cessation of fetal cardiac activity at post-procedure day 1 (arrow). (B) Transvaginal ultrasound performed at 3 months demonstrates resolution of pregnancy with resolved gestational sac.