Routine ultrasound guided evacuation of first trimester missed abortion versus blind evacuation
• 2016
Publication Information
Authors
Mostafa Abdulla Elsayed *
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publication.type
International
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Abstract
Abstract Background: The clinical management of miscarriage has changed little over the years
and many women undergo surgical uterine evacuation. Surgical evacuation of the uterine contents
in missed abortion is a challenge to the obstetrician as it is done blindly. The current study recommends
the use of ultrasound guided surgical evacuation. It serves two important advantages; the
first is to complete evacuation without the need of additional step. The second is to protect against
uterine perforation.
Outcome measures: The primary outcome measures were intraoperative and short-term complications
(anesthetic complication, hemorrhage, ongoing pregnancy, cervical trauma, uterine perforation,
need for laparoscopy and/or laparotomy, repeat evacuation, and infection). The secondary
outcomes were the blood loss, procedure time, and convalescence time.
Design: A controlled trial.
Setting: Elbadr Hospital, Benha, Egypt.
Participants: Women undergoing STOP (surgical termination of pregnancy) in the first trimester.
Methods: Two hundred cases who refused medical evacuation of proved missed abortion were
divided in two groups. Group one (one hundred patients) in whom surgical evacuation was done
under sonographic guidance. Group two (one hundred patients) in whom surgical evacuation
was done without sonographic guidance.
Results: Group one cases showed no surgical failure in contrast to 10 cases from group two who
failed with contents presented after evacuation (failure rate 10%).
Conclusions: Surgical evacuation under sonographic guidance is recommended because there aresignificant cases with missed abortion which can be incompletely evacuated without the use of the ultrasound guidance.
and many women undergo surgical uterine evacuation. Surgical evacuation of the uterine contents
in missed abortion is a challenge to the obstetrician as it is done blindly. The current study recommends
the use of ultrasound guided surgical evacuation. It serves two important advantages; the
first is to complete evacuation without the need of additional step. The second is to protect against
uterine perforation.
Outcome measures: The primary outcome measures were intraoperative and short-term complications
(anesthetic complication, hemorrhage, ongoing pregnancy, cervical trauma, uterine perforation,
need for laparoscopy and/or laparotomy, repeat evacuation, and infection). The secondary
outcomes were the blood loss, procedure time, and convalescence time.
Design: A controlled trial.
Setting: Elbadr Hospital, Benha, Egypt.
Participants: Women undergoing STOP (surgical termination of pregnancy) in the first trimester.
Methods: Two hundred cases who refused medical evacuation of proved missed abortion were
divided in two groups. Group one (one hundred patients) in whom surgical evacuation was done
under sonographic guidance. Group two (one hundred patients) in whom surgical evacuation
was done without sonographic guidance.
Results: Group one cases showed no surgical failure in contrast to 10 cases from group two who
failed with contents presented after evacuation (failure rate 10%).
Conclusions: Surgical evacuation under sonographic guidance is recommended because there aresignificant cases with missed abortion which can be incompletely evacuated without the use of the ultrasound guidance.
Staff Members - Benha University