Complicated third stage of labor: time to switch on the scanner. (1/60)

This Editorial chronicles the current experience in ultrasound usage during pathologic events occurring in the third stage of labor. Further improvement in the technology for carrying out clinical research will improve our knowledge so that more information can be gleaned from this modality to bestow optimal management for such potentially dangerous conditions. Awareness of the capabilities of sonography may provide the motivation for its use, and obstetricians are encouraged to scan the third stage of normal deliveries for better recognition of normal findings and improved assessment of abnormal ones. Although final decisions should be based mainly upon sound clinical judgement, we contend that complicated third stage of labor warrants turning on the scanner.  (+info)

Gray scale and color Doppler sonography in the third stage of labor for early detection of failed placental separation. (2/60)

OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was the characterization of normal and abnormal third stage placental separation using gray scale and color Doppler sonography. METHODS: The third stage of labor was examined in 62 patients using gray scale and color Doppler sonography. After identification of placental basal plate vessels by color Doppler sonography, the placentation site was examined throughout the third stage with combined gray scale and color Doppler mode. Placental separation from the myometrium was defined clinically and correlated to cessation of color Doppler detected blood flow in basal plate vessels. RESULTS: Three sonographic phases of placental separation were: (1) latent = interval between delivery of the fetus and beginning placental separation; (2) detachment = mono- or multiphasic shearing off of the placenta and (3) expulsion = interval between completed separation and vaginal delivery of the placenta. In 57 cases with clinically normal placental separation blood flow between placenta and myometrium ceased immediately after delivery of the fetus during the latent period. In five cases manual or instrumental removal was necessary because of placenta adhaerens in one case and placenta accreta in four cases. The latter showed maternal blood flow from the myometrium deep into the placenta beyond the latent phase. CONCLUSION: Cessation of blood flow between the basal placenta and myometrium following delivery of the baby is the sonographic hallmark of normal placental separation. Persistent blood flow demonstrated by color Doppler sonography is suggestive of placenta accreta.  (+info)

Prenatal diagnosis of placenta previa accreta by transabdominal color Doppler ultrasound. (3/60)

OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of transabdominal color Doppler ultrasound in diagnosing placenta previa accreta. DESIGN: Eighty patients with persistent placenta previa underwent transabdominal B-mode and color Doppler ultrasound evaluation in the second and third trimesters because they had a high risk of placenta accreta. Color Doppler imaging criteria used included diffuse intraparenchymal placental lacunar flow; focal intraparenchymal placental lacunar flow; bladder-uterine serosa interphase hypervascularity; prominent subplacental venous complex; and loss of subplacental Doppler vascular signals. The color Doppler images were interpreted prospectively for signs of placenta previa accreta according to the exhibited color Doppler sonographic features. RESULTS: Sixteen of the 80 patients exhibited characteristic color Doppler imaging patterns highly specific for placenta accreta according to the preceding criteria, and 14 of these had histopathological proof of placenta accreta. Two patients had false-positive color Doppler imaging evidence mistaken for interphase hypervascularity caused by bladder varices. Thirteen patients underwent hysterectomy in the group suspicious for accreta. Of the 64 patients with negative color Doppler imaging results, three had placenta accreta, while two required cesarean hysterectomy; the remaining patient underwent uterine artery ligation for bleeding from the lower uterine segment. The sensitivity of color Doppler imaging in the diagnosis of placenta previa accreta was 82.4% (14/17) and the specificity was 96.8% (61/63). The positive and negative predictive values were 87.5% (14/16) and 95.3% (61/64), respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Variable vascular morphological patterns of placenta previa accreta were exhibited and categorized by transabdominal color Doppler sonography in the antenatal period. The identification of these specific vascular patterns had a positive impact on the peripartum clinical management of the affected patients.  (+info)

Identification of mtDNA mutation in a pedigree with gestational diabetes, deafness, Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome and placenta accreta. (4/60)

Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) defects are associated with a number of human disorders. Although many occur sporadically, maternal transmission is the hallmark of diseases due to mtDNA point mutations. The same mutation may manifest strikingly different phenotypes; for example, the A to G substitution at np 3243 was first reported in patients with mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes (the MELAS syndrome), but is also found in patients with diabetes and deafness. Here we present a case of gestational diabetes, deafness, premature greying, placenta accreta and Wolff-Parkinson-White (WPW) syndrome associated with a mtDNA mutation. Although this is the first report of such an association, study of 27 other patients with WPW syndrome failed to confirm that this mtDNA mutation is a common cause of such pre-excitation disorders.  (+info)

Myometrial fibers in the placental basal plate can confirm but do not necessarily indicate clinical placenta accreta. (5/60)

Placental basal plate myometrial fibers reflect mild placenta accreta. We tested the hypotheses that a macroscopically disrupted area relates to an area where the placenta is focally adherent and that the incidence of placenta accreta is higher than stated in the literature. Sagittal blocks were taken from the basal plate from macroscopically intact, disrupted, and mixed (viz, at the junction of intactness and disruption) areas, together with an en face block from 90 singleton placentas. Histologic examination revealed that 11 of 23 placentas with a macroscopically disrupted maternal surface and 16 of 67 with a macroscopically intact maternal surface had placental basal plate myometrial fibers, a significant difference. More cases were detected with sampling from the mixed than from the intact area, while sampling from the wholly disrupted area was unrewarding. The en face block also was helpful for detecting myometrial fibers. Extensive and selective sampling of the basal plate revealed a much higher incidence of placental basal plate myometrial fibers. Clinical chart review affirmed that their presence can confirm but does not necessarily correlate with a clinical diagnosis of mild placenta accreta.  (+info)

Placenta accreta diagnosed at 9 weeks' gestation. (6/60)

The majority of cases of placenta accreta are unanticipated and initially identified intraoperatively. Although color Doppler ultrasound is adequate for the evaluation of placenta accreta in the third trimester, ultrasound diagnosis in the first trimester has never been reported. To our knowledge, this is the first case of placenta accreta detected at 9 weeks' gestation by ultrasound. Placenta accreta with intraplacental lacunae can be identified together with a loss of the hypoechogenic retroplacental myometrial zone. Based on this case, we found that early diagnosis of placenta accreta in the first trimester by ultrasound is possible.  (+info)

Antenatal diagnosis of placenta percreta with planned in situ retention and methotrexate therapy in a woman infected with HIV. (7/60)

Placenta percreta is a rare obstetric condition associated with potentially life-threatening hemorrhage. Diagnosis in advance of delivery permits a planned delivery and preparation for blood transfusions and planned Cesarean hysterectomy, which is the common treatment. We report a case of placenta percreta in an HIV-positive patient which was diagnosed in the second trimester using conventional and extended field of view ultrasound imaging and color Doppler. At 36 weeks the infant was delivered by Cesarean section and the placenta was left in situ. Postoperatively the patient was treated with methotrexate. Four weeks later, the patient delivered the placenta spontaneously. Early or late postpartum hemorrhage did not occur and postoperative recovery was uneventful.  (+info)

The early sonographic appearance of placenta accreta. (8/60)

OBJECTIVE: To determine whether any sonographic findings in the first trimester predict placenta accreta. METHODS: Patients who had a diagnosis of placenta accreta, increta, or percreta by clinical course or pathologic examination of the uterus and who had had a sonographic examination at 10 weeks or earlier were included in this study. RESULTS: Seven patients met the study criteria. In 6 of these, who had had at least 1 previous cesarean delivery, the gestational sac was located in the lower uterine segment at the time of the early scan. Two of these pregnancies failed shortly after the early scan, and the patients underwent dilation and curettage, at which time severe bleeding necessitated a hysterectomy. The other 4 continued to term but had sonographic findings typical of placenta accreta during subsequent scans. In the seventh patient (who had had no previous cesarean deliveries), the gestational sac was located in the uterine fundus. CONCLUSIONS: In a patient with a previous cesarean delivery, a sac lying in the lower uterine segment on a scan at 10 weeks or earlier suggests the possibility of placenta accreta.  (+info)