Ovarian pregnancy is a rare but well-known pathology. However, pathophysiology, diagnosis and treatment are not established. Therefore, all case reports on ovarian pregnancy published in PubMed from November 2011 till November 2022 were reviewed and two case reports were added. In these 84 case reports, 8% of ovarian pregnancies occurred in women without or with blocked oviducts and 23% were localised on the other side than the corpus luteum. Since symptoms are not specific, ovarian pregnancy has to be suspected in all women with abdominal bleeding. Surgical excision is the preferred treatment. However, since an associated intra-uterine pregnancy cannot be excluded, care should be taken not to interrupt this intra-uterine pregnancy with the uterine cannula or by damaging the corpus luteum. In conclusion, in women with abdominal bleeding, an ovarian pregnancy cannot be excluded, even in women with a negative pregnancy test or an empty uterus on transvaginal ultrasonography. Therefore, a laparoscopy is indicated but the surgeon should realise that an associated intra-uterine pregnancy also cannot be excluded and that therefore care should be taken not to interrupt this intra-uterine pregnancy by the uterine cannula or by damaging the corpus luteum.
Congenital uterine anomalies are an uncommon type of female genital malformations caused by abnormal development of müllerian ducts during embryogenesis. Patients with an obstructive uterine anomaly have a higher risk of developing gynecological and obstetric complications that may present at menarche or later in life. We present a case of severe dysmenorrhea in a young teenager caused by obstructive hematometra in a noncommunicating horn of the unicornuate uterus. A differential diagnosis of a possible anomaly was made using 2-dimensional pelvic ultrasonography, which was later confirmed using MRI that revealed an anomalous uterine cavity with a single left-sided cornua communicating with the cervix and a distended right-sided rudimentary horn. She underwent a right salpingectomy with rudimentary horn excision, which was successfully managed laparoscopically. This case emphasizes the importance of physicians being cognizant in identifying patients with uterine anomaly to provide appropriate treatment and prevent adverse reproductive outcomes.
Objective Ovarian pregnancy is a rare but well-known pathology. However, pathophysiology, diagnosis and treatment are not clearly established. Data sources. All case reports published in Pubmed from Nov 2011 till Nov 2022. Study eligibility criteria. A systematic review and 2 case reports of ovarian pregnancy Study appraisal and synthesis methods. Not applicable Results Ovarian pregnancies occur in 8% of women without or blocked oviducts and in 23% on the other side than the corpus luteum and the symptoms of ovarian pregnancies are not specific. Therefore ovarian pregnancy has to be suspected in all women with abdominal bleeding. As for extrauterine pregnancies, the presence of an intrauterine pregnancy does not rule out an ovarian pregnancy. Surgical excision is the preferred treatment. Important is that in women with both an intra-uterine and an ovarian pregnancy, care should be taken not to damage the corpus luteum. Conclusions Ovarian pregnancies can occur in women with blocked tubes, on the other side of the corpus luteum, in the presence of an intrauterine pregnancy, and even when pregnancy tests or tranvaginal ultrasonography are negative. The diagnosis being difficult to exclude, a laparoscopy is indicated in all women with intra-abdominal bleeding, keeping in mind that an intra-uterine pregnancy cannot be exluded and that a corpus luteum need to be respected.
Sertoli-Leydig cell tumors (SLCTs) are rare tumors. Mass and pain are the presenting feature. The varying histopathology and differentiation of this tumor present difficulties with proper diagnosis and development of optimal treatment regimens. The prognosis depends on tumors grading and staging. Surgery is main stay management option. Chemotherapy and radiation options are still of choice. We aimed to present Sertoli-Leydig cell tumor managed surgical at Latifa Hospital in Dubai, UAE with acceptable outcome and good patient satisfaction.
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