| Literature DB >> 36061932 |
Vilius Rudaitis1,2, Gailė Maldutytė3,2, Jūratė Brazauskienė2, Mykolas Pavlauskas3,4, Dileta Valančienė5,4.
Abstract
Caesarean scar pregnancy is a potentially life-threatening gynaecological condition, becoming more common due to steadily increasing rate of caesarean sections worldwide. More than one-third of women presenting with caesarean scar pregnancy are asymptomatic, but over the time if left untreated this condition can lead to the uterine rupture and massive maternal haemorrhage. Therefore it is necessary to diagnose and manage caesarean scar pregnancies properly at the beginning of the first trimester. We present the case of woman with three previous caesarean sections, who was diagnosed with complicated caesarean scar pregnancy and then successfully managed using surgical intervention.Entities:
Keywords: caesarean section; ectopic pregnancy; gynaecologic surgical procedures; ultrasonography
Year: 2022 PMID: 36061932 PMCID: PMC9428636 DOI: 10.15388/Amed.2022.29.1.17
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Med Litu ISSN: 1392-0138
Fig. 1.Transvaginal grayscale ultrasound image of the uterus in sagittal plane demonstrates gestational sac (arrow) implanted in the niche of previous caesarean scar site, crossing serosal line (red line), while uterine cavity line (green line) remains intact
Fig. 2.(A) Transvaginal grayscale ultrasound demonstrates heterogeneous mass inside the uterine cavity protruding anteriorly through the scar tissue (arrow). Both the serosal line (red line) and uterine cavity line (green line) are crossed. (B) Colour Doppler imaging reveals intense vascularity in the vesicouterine space (arrow), involving posterior wall of urinary bladder
Fig. 3.(A) Sagittal T2-weighted magnetic resonance image demonstrates gestational sac as heterogeneous mass in the anterior part of lower uterine wall within the prior caesarean scar site, extending into the uterine cavity (white arrow). The scar margins are separated (red line) following infiltration by ectopic tissue. The “tenting sign’’ (yellow arrow) suggests trophoblast invasion into the wall of urinary bladder. (B) Coronal T2-weighted sequence demonstrates the disruption of thin myometrium secondary to pathological infiltration (white arrows). (C, D) Sagittal and coronal T1-weighted delayed post-contrast magnetic resonance images with full urinary bladder show no “tenting sign’’ (yellow arrows) evident in A image, therefore transmural trophoblast growth into the urinary bladder can be excluded
Fig. 4.Transvaginal grayscale ultrasound image of the uterus in sagittal plane one month after the surgery demonstrates completely restored caesarean scar site (arrow)