Objective: To determine the pattern of blood flow in the patients compliant and non-compliant to hormone replacement therapy.
Methods: In the period of 12 months, 106 postmenopausal women were examined by the color and pulsed Doppler ultrasonography of the blood flow through uterine, common, and internal carotid arteries (Resistance Index, RI). The study was retrospective-descriptive.
Objective: To compare resistance to blood flow between two umbilical arteries at the same cord site during the second half of pregnancy.
Methods: We evaluated 80 patients with singleton pregnancies cross-sectionally at gestational ages ranging from 20-40 weeks' gestation. Resistance to blood flow was measured separately by means of systolic-diastolic ratio (S/D) for both umbilical arteries of each subject at the same site of transverse cord section.
Objective: To compare color and pulsed Doppler sonography with gray-scale ultrasound imaging and serum CA 125 levels in establishing accurate preoperative diagnoses of adnexal masses.
Methods: Medical records of 109 patients referred with preexisting adnexal lesions were reviewed retrospectively by comparing preoperative ultrasonic data (gray-scale imaging and color and pulsed Doppler findings) with serum CA 125 levels.
Results: Eighty-three masses were removed surgically, confirming seven malignancies and 76 benign tumors, and 26 masses were followed; 15 regressed and 11 persisted.
Background: Recognition of advanced abdominal pregnancy and care of the patient afflicted with it may present formidable challenges. Aside from the difficulty of diagnosing the problem and thereby delaying necessary intervention, management can be difficult at best, even when the condition is relatively uncomplicated. When it is compounded by a life-threatening complication, such as uncontrollable hemorrhage, it challenges the skills of the most experienced obstetrician and the resources of the best-equipped facility and its personnel.
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