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Uterine rupture in pregnancy after robotic myomectomy
Author(s) -
İsmet Hortu,
Ali Akdemir,
Fatih Şendağ,
Mehmet Kemal Öztekin
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of turkish society of obstetric and gynecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.41
H-Index - 9
eISSN - 1307-7007
pISSN - 1307-699X
DOI - 10.4274/tjod.93609
Subject(s) - medicine , uterine rupture , vomiting , pregnancy , abdominal pain , laparotomy , nausea , uterus , complication , obstetrics , surgery , exploratory laparotomy , biology , genetics
Uterine rupture in pregnancy is a rare and often catastrophic complication with a high incidence of fetal and maternal morbidity. A gravida 2 para 1 woman aged 40 years who was 33-34 weeks pregnant presented to our clinic with serious abdominal pain, nausea and vomiting that had begun 6 hours previously. Her past surgical history included a robotic myomectomy 2 years ago in our unit. Obstetric ultrasonography revealed a 33-week fetus without a heartbeat whereupon she underwent emergency laparotomy and we found a 4 cm rupture on the anterior wall of the uterus. Uterine rupture should always be kept in mind, especially in patients with history of uterine surgery.

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