Background: To evaluate the improvement of the term delivery rate after uterine surgery in various uterine malformations.
Methods: 170 patients were eligible for the present retrospective case series study. Data were weighted for the number of pregnancies observed (n = 218) after surgical intervention, stratified to the number of previous abortions (at least 2) and type of malformation.
The objective was to verify the hypothesis of a 'first uterine pass effect' or direct preferential vagina-to-uterus transport, suggested by the evidence of higher than expected uterine tissue concentrations after vaginal administration of progesterone; we used a human ex-vivo uterine perfusion model. A mixture of tritiated (3H) and unlabelled progesterone was applied to the cuff of vaginal tissue remaining attached to the cervix after hysterectomy. At the end of the perfusion period (up to 12 h), 3H and 14C radioactivity was measured in samples of uterine tissue.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe present study was undertaken to establish the role of surgical procedures, histologic type, and stage of the tumor on the survival rate of patients with borderline ovarian tumors in a 5 to 15 years of follow-up. Data reported in the literature have shown the low malignancy of this cancer and that only the stage, but not the pathological diagnosis, is significantly influencing the survival rate of the patients. After 5 years, the survival rate of patients with tumors of stage I to stage II is 98.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Assoc Gynecol Laparosc
August 1996
To compare the efficiency of two surgical techniques to remove uterine myomata, 120 premenopausal women were included in this case control study based on the criteria of no previous operations, size of leiomyoma, and age. Sixty patients were treated by laparoscopy (group 1) and 60 by laparotomy (group 2). The hospital stay for group 1 was shorter than that for group 2 (3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStudy Objective: To determine the frequency of adhesion formation after myomectomy performed by operative laparoscopy or laparotomy.
Design: Case-control study. Setting.
Study Objective: To establish the crude effects of danazol and gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) analogs in the management of endometriosis.
Design: Prospective case-control study.
Setting: Unit of the Pathophysiology of Reproduction outpatient department.
Hum Reprod Update
April 1997
The epidemiology, aetiology, diagnosis and clinical management of spontaneous and recurrent abortion and of the failure of embryo implantation are discussed in a retrospective overview of the major studies conducted since 1975 identified through a Medline search. Infertile women who experienced spontaneous single (32%) and recurrent (0.5%) abortion as well as those who became pregnant after induction of ovulation with gonadotrophins (abortion rate 17-31%) and those who underwent assisted fertilization programmes (abortion rate 18-34%) are considered.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCyclic or irregular uterine bleeding is common in perimenarchal and perimenopausal women with or without endometrial hyperplasia. The disturbance often requires surgical treatment because of its negative effects on both blood loss and abnormal endometrial growth including the development of endometrial cancer. The endometrium is often overstimulated during the perimenopausal period when estrogen/progesterone production is unbalanced.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRoughly 20% of all clinical pregnancies evolve into "spontaneous abortions". The causes of spontaneous abortion have been determined in under 60% of the total and comprise genetic, infectious, hormonal and immunological factors. In some cases the immune tolerance mechanism may be impaired and the foetus immunologically rejected (IMA, immunologically mediated abortion).
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