IV bevacizumab and IV ranibizumab are associated with similar effects on central subfield thickness in patients with DME through 1 year of follow-up. IV ranibizumab is associated with greater improvement in BCVA at some study visits, and the mean number of injections is higher in the IV bevacizumab group.
Intra-abdominal bleeding due to uterine fibroids is extremely rare, and preoperative diagnosis is difficult. Herein, we report a case of preoperatively diagnosed hypovolaemic shock due to intra-abdominal haemorrhage, in which fatal sequelae were prevented. A 46-year-old non-pregnant woman was brought to the hospital with a sudden-onset lower abdominal pain. On admission, she was in shock, and abdominal CT showed severe intra-abdominal haemorrhage. Since bleeding from uterine fibroids was suspected, an emergency simple total hysterectomy was performed, and her condition became stable after the operation. Intra-abdominal haemorrhage with hypovolaemic shock requires prompt surgical intervention. Although it occurs very rarely due to bleeding from uterine fibroids, imaging shows large fibroids; if the patient is not pregnant, bleeding from the fibroids should be considered.
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