scholarly journals A case of maternal death in a pregnant woman with fulminant hepatitis C

2017 ◽  
Vol 98 (3) ◽  
pp. 462-465
Author(s):  
E G Saryeva

The article presents a description and analysis of a rare case of fulminant form of viral hepatitis C in a pregnant woman. A pregnant 24-year old patient (3d pregnancy, 1st delivery), was admitted to the hospital in a critical condition with suspected obstructive jaundice. As a result of diagnostic process the following diagnosis was made. Pregnancy, 36-37 weeks. Cephalic presentation. Antenatal intrauterine fetal death. Acute icteric viral hepatitis C, fulminant course. C-section was performed. In spite of fluid therapy during and after the surgery, the patient developed multiple organ failure which caused death. In spite of adequate resuscitation, the fulminant viral hepatitis C caused compromised liver function and multiple organ failure development, which became the cause of maternal death. We believe that intensified medical educational activity including nursing of the pregnant women and increased quality of other medical organizational activities are required that will lead to decreased maternal mortality rate on the periphery.

2020 ◽  
pp. 61-63
Author(s):  
S. Sh. Kakvaeva ◽  
M. A. Magomedova ◽  
A. N. Dzhalilova

One of the most serious problems of modern medicine is sepsis. The number of patients undergoing this complication is 20–30 million (WHO) annually and has no tendency to decrease. Sepsis is characterized by severe multiple organ failure due to a violation of the response of the macroorganism to an infectious agent. Moreover, it is dangerous with high mortality. Sepsis often develops in patients with immunodeficiency conditions, which primarily include pregnant women. The article presents a clinical observation of a case of periostitis in a pregnant woman complicated by a septic state.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 784-788
Author(s):  
O. V. Vorobeva ◽  
A. V. Lastochkin

The significance of chronic hepatitis is determined not only by the disease per se, but also by the increased risk of the formation of long-term adverse effects such as liver cirrhosis. Viral cirrhosis of the liver (as the outcome of chronic hepatitis B, C, B + D) comprise from 10% to 24.5% of all liver cirrhosis cases. Cirrhosis of the liver is considered as an irreversible stage of chronic hepatitis, more often observed in men above 40 years, but recently more and more its cases are found in young, working ones leading to disability. Due to the high liver regenerative potential, a prognosis for liver lesions of different etiologies may be rather favorable. As a result, early diagnostics, dynamic monitoring and the use of promising methods for treating liver pathology to stimulate its regeneration that compensates for lost liver functions are necessary. In the clinical and morphological case, pathomorphological changes in organs with liver cirrhosis, which developed as a result of viral hepatitis are described. The aim of the study was to describe pathomorphological changes in organs during liver cirrhosis, which developed due to viral hepatitis, which led to multiple organ failure in a young patient. Materials and methods. The analysis of the obtained accompanying medical documentation (outpatient card, medical history) was performed. The standard methodology of autopsy was used. To process histological sections of autopsy material, hematoxylin-eosin staining was used. Results. Histological examination in the liver shows development of portal tract fibrosis with lymphohistio cytic infiltration, formation of monolobular regenerated nodes, signs of edema, areas of demyelination, dystrophic changes in neurocytes, signs of acute renal failure, a combined profound change in the kidneys detected in the lungs and brain, which resulted in multiple organ failure and subsequent lethal outcome in a young patient. The early formation of portal hypertension with liver cirrhosis, esophageal and gastric varicose veins dilatation lead to fatal bleeding in half of patients. Therefore, timely diagnosed cirrhosis and hepatitis as their predecessors is one of the most relevant issues in medicine.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (4(38)) ◽  
pp. 92-97
Author(s):  
I. Lastivka ◽  
A. Babintseva ◽  
Y. Hodovanets ◽  
M. Soboleva ◽  
D. Koliubakin

          Summary.  Edwards syndrome is a hereditary disease characterized by trisomy of the 18th chromosome (trisomy 18). The occurrence of Edwards syndrome is 1 per 6 000 live births, the proportion of girls to boys is 3:1. In 95 % of all the cases of Edwards syndrome development, an extra copy of the 18th chromosome is present in the cells (complete trisomy), in 2 % the translocation of another chromosome on the 18th one is found; in 3 % of cases “mosaic trisomy” is found when the additional 47th chromosome is found not in all the cells but in a part of them. The most important, but not a single risk factor promoting the development of trisomy 18 is a woman’s age over 40. Prenatal diagnostics of Edwards syndrome includes USD and biochemical screening of a pregnant woman during the 11-13th weeks of gestation studying the levels of β-chorionic human gonadotrophine and plasma protein А, associated with pregnancy, as well as karyotype detection of the fetus in pregnant women from risk groups.    The article presents a clinical case of Edwards syndrome of a newborn girl born from I pregnancy (anemia of pregnancy, early toxicosis, maternal chronic pyelonephritis, parental contact with industrial harmful factors), І physiological labour on the 40-41st week with breech presentation, body weight of  1480 g and body length of 40 cm, and 4/4 Apgar score. The woman was found to be registered regarding pregnancy since the 15th week of gestation, she positively refused screening examinations. The first USD was performed during the 30th week of gestation. It found complicated congenital developmental defects of the heart and retarded development of the fetus syndrome. The risk of a child’s birth with congenital pathology was considered to be high. The child’s condition at birth and during the whole period of treatment and care in the neonatal resuscitation unit was assessed as severe with progressive negative dynamics at the expense of deterioration of multiple organ failure signs. Examination of the patients found multiple dysmorphic signs including narrow eyelid openings, low-set ears, microstomy, micrognathia, deformities of the limbs. By means of instrumental methods of examination semilobar shape of the holoprosencephaly (Patau's syndrome), double origin of the major vessels from the right ventricle, defect of the interatrial septum, subaortal defect, right ventricular hypertrophy, defect of the intraventricular septum, the signs of pulmonary hypertension were found; cytogenetic examination detected  -47, ХХ, +18, Edwards syndrome. Considering the severity of multiple developmental defects, in spite of initiated treatment, the girl died at the age of 29 days 3 hours, and 30 minutes. The underlying disease and the cause of death of a term, morphologically immature girl with a low body weight at birth was the chromosome defect – trisomy 18 (Edwards syndrome) complicated by the development of multiple organ failure.  The clinical case presented illustrates an untimely diagnostics of Edwards syndrome (trisomy 18) due to late registration of the pregnant woman, her refuse from screening examinations, including USD, and detection of levels of β-chorionic human gonadotropin and plasma protein A associated with pregnancy. Late prenatal diagnostics of multiple congenital developmental defects of the fetus, lack of prenatal invasive examination with cytogenetic analysis, and diagnostics of chromosome pathology of the child after birth are associated with the solution of ethical issues concerning the choice of “aggressive” therapeutic tactics or giving palliative aid to the child with Edwards syndrome.


2015 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 115-119
Author(s):  
Małgorzata Pawłowska

2008 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 89-94
Author(s):  
İsmail Hamdi Kara

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document