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Rare primary abdominal ectopic pregnancy in the pouch of Douglas
Author(s) -
Joshua Baji Thomas
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
bmj case reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.231
H-Index - 26
ISSN - 1757-790X
DOI - 10.1136/bcr-2018-228547
Subject(s) - medicine , ectopic pregnancy , pouch , gestational sac , vascularity , abdominal pain , gynecology , laparoscopy , pregnancy , abdomen , obstetrics , surgery , genetics , biology
A 35-year-old Nepalese woman, referred by her general practitioner for per vaginal spotting and abdominal pain for the past 12 days with a background history of 5 weeks of amenorrhoea and a quantifiable beta-human chorionic gonadotrophin of 18 900 IU/L. Subsequent pelvic ultrasound revealed a cystic lesion with peripheral vascularity in the pouch of Douglas indicating possible ectopic pregnancy with no intrauterine gestational sac seen. Subsequent to that, she underwent a diagnostic laparoscopy that revealed 150 mL of blood in the pouch of Douglas with no other obvious evidence of tubal or ovarian ectopic pregnancy seen. There was, however, a resemblance of trophoblastic tissue noted on the wall of the pouch of Douglas that was further investigated to reveal a primary ectopic pregnancy of the pouch of Douglas with no trophoblastic infiltration.

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