| Literature DB >> 35399742 |
Daniel Keller1, Matthew Morris2, Ryan McLaughlin1, David Evans1, Michael Joyce1.
Abstract
Ectopic pregnancies develop outside of the uterus and lead to significant maternal morbidity and mortality if they rupture. As the primary diagnostic tool for these presentations, ultrasound has a growing list of signs and measurements that help distinguish between intrauterine and ectopic pregnancies, the latter being exceedingly rare once a woman has entered her second trimester. The present case reports a series of Emergency Department visits by a woman carrying a second-trimester pregnancy-deemed intrauterine on transabdominal ultrasound due to gestational age and location-who developed massive hemoperitoneum and was diagnosed with a ruptured 15-week tubo-ovarian pregnancy on laparotomy. The discussion describes the sonographic findings that could have helped make the proper diagnosis, most notably mantle distance-the thickness of the myometrium surrounding the gestational sac-which would have correctly identified this pregnancy as ectopic.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35399742 PMCID: PMC8989622 DOI: 10.1155/2022/5568711
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Emerg Med ISSN: 2090-6498
Figure 1Bedside TAUS on visit 1. FF = free fluid; GS = gestational sac; F = fetus; U = uterus.
Figure 2Bedside TAUS on visit 2. FF = free fluid; MD = mantle distance; GS = gestational sac; F = fetus; U = uterus.
Figure 3Bedside TAUS on visit 3. MD = mantle distance; GS = gestational sac; F = fetus; U = uterus; FF = free fluid around the liver tip.
Figure 4CTA showing fetal structures (F) within a gestational sac (GS) anterior to the uterus (U).