We present a case of apoplexia uteri, a rarely described condition of haemorrhagic necrosis in an atrophic endometrium and myometrium associated with terminal stress. This entity is well recognised in older literature but few recent publications have addressed this condition. It is thought to occur in association with hypoperfusion with passive hyperaemia and reperfusion injury. This case serves to highlight this rarely encountered entity as a possible cause of haemorrhage in an atrophic endometrium in the 'perimortem' period. Incidental findings are occasionally observed in the course of forensic autopsy practice and knowledge of rarely encountered entities, such as that described in this case, is essential to prevent diagnostic uncertainty and misdiagnosis.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jflm.2013.04.005 | DOI Listing |
J Forensic Leg Med
August 2013
Department of Histopathology, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, Dublin, Ireland.
We present a case of apoplexia uteri, a rarely described condition of haemorrhagic necrosis in an atrophic endometrium and myometrium associated with terminal stress. This entity is well recognised in older literature but few recent publications have addressed this condition. It is thought to occur in association with hypoperfusion with passive hyperaemia and reperfusion injury.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCesk Patol
October 2004
Oddĕlení patologie, Nemocnice, Kolín.
This is a detailed histological autopsy study of 47 cases of macroscopically recognisable flat intraendometrial haemorrhage into the atrophic lining of the uterine cavity. The average age of the studied women was 71 years. The majority of the deceased patients (61%) had suffered from various cardiovascular diseases or acute abdomen; the rest had disseminated carcinoma, chronic lung, kidney or liver diseases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOrv Hetil
May 1996
Semmelweis Orvostudományi Egyetem, Budapest, Szülészeti és Nögyógyászati Klinika.
Between the 1st July 1990 and the 30th June 1995, 34 caesarean hysterectomies and 2708 (22%) caesarean sections were performed from 12,227 births on the I. Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology Semmelweis University Medical School in Budapest. From all 34 cases, hysterectomy were performed in 9 cases (26%) after complicated delivery, in other 9 cases (26%) during elective caesarean section and in 16 cases (47%) during urgent caesarean section.
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