Selective reduction in multiple gestations: pregnancy outcome after transvaginal and transabdominal needle-guided procedures

Fertility and sterility, 52(3), 416-420

DOI 10.1016/s0015-0282(16)60910-x PMID 2776895 Source

Abstract

Selective fetal reduction was performed in the first trimester of pregnancy in 20 women with multifetal gestations after ovulation induction with human menopausal gonadotropin (hMG). In 10 women (group A) reduction was performed transabdominally, and in 10 women (group B) the transvaginal approach was used. The transvaginal technique achieved penetration of several gestational sacs without withdrawing the needle from the uterus. Fetal termination using either procedure occurred with intrafetal injection of potassium chloride. Six (60%, group A) and eight (80%, group B) patients delivered healthy newborns. One patient (group B) is at 30 weeks' gestation. Four (40%, group A) and one (10%, group B) aborted 1 day to 8 weeks after the procedure (1 septic abortion, each group). Our results suggest that transvaginal fetal reduction offers a better outcome, with minimal complications, to patients referred for selective continuation of pregnancy.

Topics

selective fetal reduction multiples, transvaginal fetal reduction technique, multiple pregnancy reduction outcomes, potassium chloride fetal termination, multifetal pregnancy management, ovulation induction multiple gestations, hmg multiple pregnancy complications, first trimester selective reduction, transabdominal versus transvaginal reduction

Cite this article

Shalev, J., Frenkel, Y., Goldenberg, M., Shalev, E., Lipitz, S., Barkai, G., Nebel, L., & Mashiach, S. (1989). Selective reduction in multiple gestations: pregnancy outcome after transvaginal and transabdominal needle-guided procedures. *Fertility and sterility*, *52*(3), 416-420. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0015-0282(16)60910-x

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