Endometriosis is presence of functioning endometrial tissue outside the uterine cavity. Endometriosis can sometimes occur in a previous surgical scar. Scar endometriosis is rare and difficult to diagnose. It mostly follows obstetrical and gynecological surgeries. This condition is often confused with other surgical conditions. We are reporting two cases of scar endometriosis following cesarean section, which were misdiagnosed as stitch granuloma initially. Medical treatment was not helpful. Both the patients required wide surgical excision of the lesion. The pathogenesis, diagnosis and treatment of this condition are being discussed.
Objective: To compare the maternal and neonatal morbidities between the Patwardhan technique and the routine "Push" and "Pull" method for extraction of the foetus in second stage caesarean sections.
FNAC of ovarian masses is a minimally invasive procedure that can differentiate neoplastic from non-neoplastic ovarian lesions. It may help avoid unnecessary operations and preserve the reproductive ability in young patients. Furthermore, it also enables a satisfactory sub-categorization of ovarian tumours, which facilitates the choice of appropriate therapy.
Background and Objective: There is a controversy regarding universal versus targeted screening for hypothyroidism during pregnancy. We studied the prevalence and the associated risk factors of hypothyroidism. The secondary objective of the study was to compare the maternal and perinatal outcomes in overt and subclinical hypothyroidism. Methods: We screened 1,005 antenatal patients for hypothyroidism with a thyrotropin assay. Patients diagnosed with hypothyroidism were further tested for anti-thyroid peroxidase antibodies and free thyroxin to determine the cause and type (overt or subclinical) of hypothyroidism. Maternal and perinatal outcomes were compared in the overt, subclinical and euthyroid groups. Results: The overall prevalence of hypothyroidism was 6.3% (overt 2.9% and subclinical 3.4%). Thirty-four (3.4%) new hypothyroid cases could be detected by universal screening. The risk factors for thyroid dysfunction were not significantly different in the screen-positive versus screen-negative patients except for excessive weight gain (p = 0.00). Targeted screening could have missed one third of subclinical hypothyroid cases. Gestational hypertension was significantly greater in the overt hypothyroid group (p = 0.007), and more patients required induction in this group (p = 0.013) but other maternal complications and perinatal outcomes were similar. Conclusion: We recommend universal screening for hypothyroidism in pregnancy in our population, as the prevalence of hypothyroidism is high.
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