submucous myoma
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Author(s):  
Prabha Agrawal ◽  
Rahul Agrawal ◽  
Sri Varshini Muthineni

The occurrence of post-operative fever after myomectomy without an apparent infectious cause has been reported in various studies. We here in report a case of an 18-year girl with abnormal uterine bleeding and severe anemia resulting from a large 5 cm submucosal fibroid. She underwent laparoscopic myomectomy. Surgery was uneventful. Post-operative she had fever of 100.4°F which lasted for 48 hours. Antibiotic coverage was continued for 48 hours. Her urine culture and hemogram were negative for infection. Early postoperative fever is most commonly caused by inflammatory changes rather than infectious causes. Large submucous fibroids can be managed by laparoscopy with excellent clinical outcomes and minimal morbidity.


2021 ◽  
Vol 104 (8) ◽  
pp. 1393-1399

Uterine myomas are usually asymptomatic, although, most women with submucous myoma have severe symptom including abnormal uterine bleeding and infertility. Hysteroscopic myomectomy is a minimally invasive surgery and is a key benefit to patient care. Patient with submucous myoma no longer requires hysterotomy. Hysteroscopic myomectomy became the gold standard treatment in women who desire to preserve fertility. Complete removal of myoma in one-step procedure should be considered. Pre-operative optimization with cervical ripening agents including osmotic dilators such as laminaria tents and prostaglandin such as misoprostol and dinoprostone is important and decrease the risk of cervical trauma as well as uterine perforation. During the procedure, low viscosity isotonic conductive media such as normal saline are recommended to use with bipolar resectoscope and mechanical morcellator, and fluid deficit should be closely monitored at a minimum of 10-minute intervals. Resectoscope is usually used with slicing technique for resection of myoma. Morcellator can be used as it is easy to use, reduces risk of perforation, and reduces non-electrical currents. However, there is a limited utility in type 2 myoma. In addition, hyaluronic acid and polyethylene oxidesodium carboxymethylcellulose gel may reduce intrauterine adhesion after hysteroscopic myomectomy. Keywords: Hysteroscopy; Morcellation; Myoma; Uterine myomectomy


Author(s):  
Rooma Sinha ◽  
Rupa Bana ◽  
Girija Shankar Mohanty ◽  
Nivya K
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
YunZheng Zhang ◽  
ZiHao Wang ◽  
Jin Zhang ◽  
CuiCui Wang ◽  
YuShan Wang ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Hysteroscopy is a commonly used technique for diagnosing endometrial lesions. It is essential to develop an objective model to aid clinicians in lesion diagnosis, as each type of lesion has a distinct treatment, and judgments of hysteroscopists are relatively subjective. This study constructs a convolutional neural network model that can automatically classify endometrial lesions using hysteroscopic images as input. Methods All histopathologically confirmed endometrial lesion images were obtained from the Shengjing Hospital of China Medical University, including endometrial hyperplasia without atypia, atypical hyperplasia, endometrial cancer, endometrial polyps, and submucous myomas. The study included 1851 images from 454 patients. After the images were preprocessed (histogram equalization, addition of noise, rotations, and flips), a training set of 6478 images was input into a tuned VGGNet-16 model; 250 images were used as the test set to evaluate the model’s performance. Thereafter, we compared the model’s results with the diagnosis of gynecologists. Results The overall accuracy of the VGGNet-16 model in classifying endometrial lesions is 80.8%. Its sensitivity to endometrial hyperplasia without atypia, atypical hyperplasia, endometrial cancer, endometrial polyp, and submucous myoma is 84.0%, 68.0%, 78.0%, 94.0%, and 80.0%, respectively; for these diagnoses, the model’s specificity is 92.5%, 95.5%, 96.5%, 95.0%, and 96.5%, respectively. When classifying lesions as benign or as premalignant/malignant, the VGGNet-16 model’s accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity are 90.8%, 83.0%, and 96.0%, respectively. The diagnostic performance of the VGGNet-16 model is slightly better than that of the three gynecologists in both classification tasks. With the aid of the model, the overall accuracy of the diagnosis of endometrial lesions by gynecologists can be improved. Conclusions The VGGNet-16 model performs well in classifying endometrial lesions from hysteroscopic images and can provide objective diagnostic evidence for hysteroscopists.


Author(s):  
Nilaj Bagde ◽  
Sefali Shinde ◽  
Vinita Singh ◽  
Rahul Satarkar ◽  
Habung Yarang

Non Puerperal Uterine Inversion (NPUI) is a very uncommon condition. The incidence of puerparal uterine inversion make an estimate of 1/30,000 deliveries and NPUI approximately 17% of all uterine inversion. The most common cause which leads to uterine inversion is a submucous myoma attached to the fundus but diagnosis can be difficult to make. The management of uterine inversion is always challenging for a surgeon. In the present case a 38-year-old woman, presented with significant anaemia because of menorrhagia. She used to feel mass occasionally into the vaginal canal which never comes out of the introitus, the mass was elucidated as a fibroid polyp. On investigation, her haemoglobin was 6.6 gm%, with continous bleeding per vaginum, patient was transfused with three units packed red blood cells and planned for surgery. A diagnosis of incomplete uterine inversion secondary to a submucous fibroid was made at exploratory laparotomy. Total abdominal hysterectomy, right salpingectomy with left salpingo-oophorectomy was performed. The patient was discharged under satisfactory condition.


2020 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 89
Author(s):  
Reny Retnaningsih ◽  
Zainal Alim

Objectives: The aim of this study was to discover the characteristics of uterine myoma patients at the inpatient rooms of dr. Soepraon 2nd Grade Military Hospital, Malang.Case Report: Women reproductive system is prone to health problems, one of them is uterine myoma which being detected through pathology anatomy examination and shows an increasing prevalence (70%) nowadays. In Indonesia, the cases of uterine myoma reach 2,39 – 11,7%, placing second right after cervical cancer. The aim of this study was to discover the characteristics of uterine myoma patients at the inpatient rooms of dr. Soepraon 2nd Grade Military Hospital, Malang. The research design used in this study was case report. Population of this study included uterine myoma patients who were being treated at the inpatient rooms of dr. Soepraon 2nd Grade Military Hospital, Malang in between the period of January – December 2017 with a total of 82 patients. The sampling method used was total sampling. Sample of this study was acquired through secondary data in the form of medical records. The result of this study showed that the highest number of case was in the 50 – 54 years old age group (53.3%), the most common education background was high school graduates (46%), the most common occupation group was the unemployed (59%), the most common surgical therapy done was myomectomy (89%), the most common myoma was submucous myoma (46,3%) and the most common parity status was multipara (44%).Conclusion: Women aged 45 and older with multipara history are advised to maintain their reproductive health through healthy eating pattern, regular exercise and regular check-ups to detect the possibility of developing uterine myomas early.


2020 ◽  
Vol 103 (6) ◽  
pp. 585-593

Objective: To evaluate the accuracy of transvaginal ultrasonography (TVS) and saline infusion sonography (SIS) in use for the diagnosis of endometrial polyps and submucous myoma compared to hysteroscopy. Histopathology was considered as the gold standard for final diagnosis. Materials and Methods: The present retrospective study was conducted at Bhumibol Adulyadej Hospital, Bangkok, Thailand between January 2014 and December 2017. Medical records of 150 patients who attended for hysteroscopy and histopathological diagnosis were reviewed. The accuracy of TVS and SIS for the diagnosis of endometrial polyps and submucous myoma were determined. Results: Out of 150 enrolled cases, endometrial polyp was the most frequent hysteroscopic finding in participants of the present study (92/150). Sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV), negative predictive value (NPV), and accuracy of TVS, SIS, and hysteroscopy compared to pathologic reports for detection endometrial polyps were 71.7% versus 93.5% versus 97.8%, 38.5% versus 52.2% versus 68.2%, 80.5% versus 88.7% versus 92.8%, 27.8% versus 66.7% versus 88.2%, and 64.4% versus 85.2% versus 92.1%, respectively. The sensitivity, specificity, PPV, NPV, and accuracy of TVS, SIS, and hysteroscopy for detection of submucous myoma were 81.6% versus 92.1% versus 94.7%, 66.7% versus 86.9% versus 100%, 77.5% versus 92.1% versus 100%, 72.0% versus 86.9% versus 90.9%, and 75.4% versus 90.2% versus 96.6%, respectively. The kappa value from TVS, SIS, and hysteroscopy when the histopathologic reports were overall intrauterine abnormalities, endometrial polyps and submucous myoma were 0.45/0.43/0.72, 0.77/0.76/0.89, and 0.92/0.92/1.00, respectively. Conclusion: Sensitivity, specificity, PPV, NPV, accuracy, and kappa value of SIS for detecting endometrial polyps and submucous myoma were better than TVS. Keywords: Ultrasonography, Saline infusion sonography, Hysteroscopy, Accuracy


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