A fifteen year experience with ectopic pregnancy

Surgery, Gynecology & Obstetrics, 152(2), 179-182

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Abstract

The increasing importance of an ectopic pregnancy as a cause of maternal death presents a challenge that will be met when primary care physicians combine a high index of suspicion with the ability to recognize the patient most at risk. The major symptoms, abdominal pain, secondary amenorrhea and abnormal vaginal bleeding are well known, as are the major signs, abdominal tenderness, adnexal mass and tenderness on motion of the cervix. Less well known are factors in the clinical history which indicate the patient to be at high risk. These include primary or secondary infertility, previous abortion or ectopic pregnancy and previous tubal operation, either reconstructive or sterilizing. In addition, the use of an intrauterine contraceptive device or its recent removal because of abdominal pain or bleeding, or both, is highly significant. Of major importance is a history of recent uterine evacuation. Should the diagnosis of ectopic pregnancy be under consideration, procrastination by observation is no longer acceptable. An active effort must be made to confirm or deny the diagnosis, Culdocentesis should be performed in the emergency department or clinic. If positive, prompt laparotomy is indicated. Should the result of culdocentesis be unsatisfactory or negative, laparotomy should be undertaken with further delay.

Topics

ectopic pregnancy clinical diagnosis risk factors, ectopic pregnancy fifteen year experience retrospective, ectopic pregnancy IUD use risk factor, tubal ectopic pregnancy previous surgery infertility history, culdocentesis ectopic pregnancy emergency diagnosis, ectopic pregnancy maternal mortality primary care recognition, ectopic pregnancy symptoms abdominal pain amenorrhea bleeding, ectopic pregnancy after tubal sterilization reconstruction, ectopic pregnancy high risk factors clinical history, ectopic pregnancy diagnosis uterine evacuation history

Cite this article

Tancer, M. L., Delke, I., & Veridiano, N. P. (1981). A fifteen year experience with ectopic pregnancy. *Surgery, gynecology & obstetrics*, *152*(2), 179-182.

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