The effectiveness of non-surgical management of early interstitial pregnancy: a report of ten cases and review of the literature. (1/108)

OBJECTIVE: To assess the effectiveness of non-surgical management of interstitial pregnancy. DESIGN: A prospective interventional study. SUBJECTS: Eleven women with the ultrasound diagnosis of interstitial ectopic pregnancy. METHODS: Women with suspected early pregnancy complications were examined by transvaginal ultrasound. Those with the diagnosis of interstitial pregnancy were offered non-surgical treatment with methotrexate, which was administered systemically or by local injection. Follow-up with regular measurements of beta-human chorionic gonadotropin and ultrasound scans continued until the pregnancy had resolved completely. RESULTS: Ten women were managed non-surgically, and one woman opted for surgery. Five women received systemic and five local methotrexate. Local therapy was successful in all five cases (100%), whereas four out of five (80%) women receiving systemic methotrexate were cured. Significant side-effects were noted in two women following systemic therapy. In comparison, there were no side-effects in the group of women who received local therapy. There were no significant differences between the two treatment groups in the length of time taken for the pregnancy to resolve. CONCLUSIONS: Non-surgical treatment of interstitial pregnancy with methotrexate appears to be safe and effective. Local administration appears to be more successful and better tolerated by patients and may be used as the first-line therapy.  (+info)

Laparoscopy-assisted intrapelvic sonography with a high-frequency, real-time miniature transducer for assessment of the Fallopian tube: a preliminary report. (2/108)

Our purpose was to visualize normal and abnormal Fallopian tubes using laparoscopy-assisted intrapelvic sonography with a specially developed 20 MHz flexible catheter-based high-resolution, real-time miniature (2.4 mm outer diameter) ultrasound transducer in infertile women. A total of 21 women (20 infertile, one with unilateral hydrosalpinx, and one tubal pregnancy) were studied with pelvic saline effusion under laparoscopy. Fimbriae were clearly depicted with a cockscomb-like form in 95% of patients. All ampullae were visualized, and mucosal layers were clearly distinguished from muscle layers in 70% of patients. Scanty intratubal effusion was noted in 50% of patients, and tubal spastic findings were found in 10% of patients. In all, 60% of isthmuses were detected, and mucosal layers were distinguished from muscle layers in 30%. In the subject with hydrosalpinx, the tubal wall was thinner, and it was not possible to distinguish between muscle and mucosal layers. In the subject with a tubal pregnancy, the amniotic membrane and decidua were depicted more clearly than by transvaginal sonography. In conclusion, laparoscopy-assisted intrapelvic sonography with a high-frequency, real-time miniature transducer may be useful in the assessment of tubal texture and function in tubal disorders, possibly in infertility practice.  (+info)

Simultaneous rupturing heterotopic pregnancy and acute appendicitis in an in-vitro fertilization twin pregnancy. (3/108)

The presentation of acute abdominal pain in young women is not an unusual occurrence in casualty and gynaecology departments. Both acute appendicitis and ectopic pregnancy have to be considered and investigated, as these two conditions are accepted as the most common surgical causes of an acute abdomen. Difficulties in correctly identifying the cause of the pain can be hazardous to the patient and care needs to be taken in obtaining a prompt and accurate diagnosis enabling the most appropriate management. The case report presented here describes the extremely unusual occurrence of both these acute conditions happening simultaneously with the added complication of an ongoing twin pregnancy and it highlights the need to look beyond the most obvious diagnosis and always to expect the unexpected.  (+info)

Luteal phase and clinical outcome after human menopausal gonadotrophin/gonadotrophin releasing hormone antagonist treatment for ovarian stimulation in in-vitro fertilization/intracytoplasmic sperm injection cycles. (4/108)

The luteal phase hormonal profile and the clinical outcome of 69 patients undergoing in-vitro fertilization (IVF) or intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) after ovarian stimulation with human menopausal gonadotrophin (HMG) and the gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH) antagonist Cetrorelix were analysed. Twenty-four patients received Cetrorelix 0.5 mg (group I) while in 45 patients Cetrorelix 0.25 mg was administered (group II). Human chorionic gonadotrophin (HCG) was used as luteal support. Nine clinical pregnancies were obtained in group I (37.5%) and 12 in group II (26. 6%). These results were not significantly different. Serum progesterone and oestradiol concentrations did not differ between the two groups either in pregnant or non-pregnant patients. An expected decrease of the same hormones was observed 8 days after the pre-ovulatory HCG injection in non-pregnant women. With regard to serum luteinizing hormone concentrations, a decrease was observed 2 days after the pre-ovulatory HCG injection and was maintained at almost undetectable levels throughout the entire luteal phase in both conception and non-conception cycles of group I and group II. This study demonstrates that different doses of GnRH antagonist do not have any impact on the luteal phase of IVF/ICSI cycles when hormonal support is given.  (+info)

The effect of hydrosalpinges on IVF-ET outcome. (5/108)

PURPOSE: Our purpose was to determine if the presence of a hydrosalpinx effects the outcome of in vitro fertilization (IVF)-embryo transfer. METHODS: We performed a retrospective analysis of IVF cycle stimulation sheets. RESULTS: A total of 1000 patients with tubal factor infertility was analyzed. There were 60 hydrosalpinx patients who underwent 116 initiated cycles with 106 embryo transfers, compared to 940 control patients undergoing 1428 initiated cycles with 1150 embryo transfers. Both groups had a similar response to ovarian stimulation, number of oocytes retrieved, and number of embryos transferred. The hydrosalpinx group had a significantly higher preclinical loss rate (22/59 = 37% vs 80/566 = 14%; P = 0.001), a significantly lower implantation rate (55/352 = 16% vs 795/3795 = 21%; P = 0.013), a trend toward a reduced delivery rate per transfer (28/106 = 26% vs 387/1150 = 34%; P = 0.066), a significantly higher ectopic pregnancy rate (5/59 = 8% vs 16/566 = 3%; P = 0.04), and a similar spontaneous abortion rate (9/37 = 24% vs 99/486 = 20%; P = 0.28) compared to the control tubal factor group. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates a decrease in implantation rates and an increase in preclinical miscarriages and ectopic pregnancies in patients with hydrosalpinges compared to tubal-factor patients without sonographic evidence of dilated fallopian tubes.  (+info)

Predictors of success of methotrexate treatment in women with tubal ectopic pregnancies. (6/108)

BACKGROUND: The use of methotrexate for the treatment of women with tubal ectopic pregnancies is now common practice. However, the clinical and hormonal determinants of the success of this treatment are not known. METHODS: We studied 350 women with tubal ectopic pregnancies who were treated with methotrexate intramuscularly according to a single-dose protocol. Pretreatment serum concentrations of human chorionic gonadotropin and progesterone, the size and volume of the gestational mass, fetal cardiac activity, and the presence of fluid (presumably blood) in the peritoneal cavity were correlated with the efficacy of therapy, as defined by resolution of the ectopic pregnancy without the need for surgical intervention. RESULTS: There was no relation between the women's age or parity, the size or volume of the conceptus, or the presence of fluid in the peritoneal cavity and the efficacy of treatment. Among the 320 women in whom treatment was successful (91 percent), the mean (+/-SD) serum chorionic gonadotropin and progesterone concentrations were 4019+/-6362 mIU per milliliter and 6.9+/-6.7 ng per milliliter (21.9+/-21.3 nmol per liter), respectively, as compared with 13,420+/-16,590 mIU per milliliter and 10.2+/-5.5 ng per milliliter (32.4+/-17.5 nmol per liter) (P<0.001 and P=0.02) in the 30 women in whom treatment was not successful. Fetal cardiac activity was present in 12 percent of the successfully treated cases and 30 percent of those in which treatment was not successful (P=0.01). Regression analysis revealed the pretreatment serum chorionic gonadotropin concentration to be the only factor that contributed to the failure rate. CONCLUSIONS: Among women with tubal ectopic pregnancies, a high serum chorionic gonadotropin concentration is the most important factor associated with failure of treatment with a single-dose methotrexate protocol.  (+info)

Local fetal signal is not required for maintaining IGFBP gene expression in the human decidua: evidence from extrauterine pregnancies. (7/108)

Insulin-like growth factor-II (IGF-II) from the invading extravillous cytotrophoblasts (EVTs) and insulin-like growth factor binding proteins (IGFBPs) from the maternal decidua interact at the feto-maternal interface and regulate implantation and placentation. To determine whether a local stimulus from the fetus is important in the regulation of IGFBP gene expression in the human decidua, we compared the expression of IGFBP genes in intra- and extrauterine (tubal) pregnancies. The expression of IGF-II and IGFBP-1 to IGFBP-6 mRNAs was determined by in-situ hybridization in the Fallopian tubes of extrauterine pregnancies and concurrent decidua (n = 6), and in the placentae and Fallopian tubes of intrauterine pregnancies (n = 6). All six IGFBP mRNAs were identified in the decidualized endometrium and decidualized Fallopian tubes of intra- and extrauterine pregnancies, with IGFBP-1 mRNA being the predominant mRNA. IGFBP-4 was the second most predominant mRNA and was slightly more abundant in the decidua of extrauterine pregnancies than of intrauterine pregnancies. IGF-II mRNA was expressed mainly in cells of fetal origin. The fact that the IGFBP mRNAs were expressed similarly in both intra- and extrauterine pregnancies indicates that the local physical stimulus from an implanting fetus is not necessary to induce or maintain decidual IGFBP gene expression.  (+info)

Three-dimensional vaginal sonography in obstetrics and gynaecology. (8/108)

Great strides have recently been made in obstetrics and gynaecology secondary to the development of high-performance transvaginal ultrasound (TVS) instruments. However, even this advanced technology can provide only two-dimensional (2D) views of three-dimensional (3D) structures. Although an experienced examiner can easily piece together sequential 2D planes for creating a mental 3D image, individual sectional planes cannot be achieved in a 2D image because of various difficulties. Today, 3D TVS can portray not only individual image planes, it can also store complex tissue volumes which can be digitally manipulated to display a multiplanar view, allowing a systematic tomographic survey of any particular field of interest. The same technology can also display surface rendering and transparency views to provide a more realistic 3D portrayal of various structures and anomalies. The current review provides examples and discussions of the various applications in obstetrics, gynaecology and assisted reproduction in which 3D TVS is a useful supplement to image modality.  (+info)