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1.
SAGE Open Med Case Rep ; 11: 2050313X231189404, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37533490

ABSTRACT

It is a rare condition in twin pregnancies for a fetus to coexist with a complete hydatidiform mole, present with complications, and result in a healthy neonate. Only a few cases have been reported upon review of the literature. Early diagnosis is essential because this type of pregnancy is associated with serious complications and management challenges. The complications associated with these pregnancies include antepartum hemorrhage, hyperthyroidism, preeclampsia, prematurity, fetal death, and gestational trophoblastic neoplasia. Here, we describe a case of dizygotic twin pregnancy in which a complete mole coexists with a normal fetus, complicated by hyperthyroidism, that resulted in the birth of a 1700-g female alive neonate who is euthyroid to a 25-year-old primigravida at a gestational age of 33 weeks by emergency cesarean section for an indication of a twin pregnancy molar coexisting with an alive fetus in labor. The mother had been on conservative management and treated as an inpatient for hyperthyroidism. In our country, there have been three case reports of partial moles with coexisting alive fetuses, but this is the first case report of a complete mole with a coexisting alive fetus.

2.
SAGE Open Med Case Rep ; 11: 2050313X231159505, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36923446

ABSTRACT

Uterine didelphys is a rare congenital anomaly of the female reproductive organs, designated by the presence of the uterus as a pair of organs. This occurs as a result of the failure of the embryonic fusion of Müllerian ducts. Women with this abnormality have a paired uterus with two cervices and usually a double vagina. The chance of having a pregnancy in one of the pairs along with prolapse of the other is very low in a didelphic uterus. To the best of the author's knowledge, only one case of such an event has been reported so far. In this case report, we are reporting on a 28-year-old gravida four para three (all are vaginal deliveries, 2 are alive, healthy, and term deliveries without any compilation; 1 is an early neonatal death delivered at 8 months) woman who presented to our hospital with a complaint of a protruding mass per vagina for 14 days in the presence of pregnancy. After she was evaluated and investigated, she was diagnosed with pelvic organ prolapse and late-preterm pregnancy. The prolapse reduced gradually as the gestational age advanced. Cesarean section was done at the gestational age of 38 weeks plus 2 days for the indication of infected pelvic organ prolapse in labor, with the outcome of a 3000 gram male alive neonate. Intraoperatively, there was uterine didelphys, one uterus holding the pregnancy while the other was prolapsing.

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