熊切 順
   Department   School of Medicine(Tokyo Women's Medical University Hospital), School of Medicine
   Position   Professor
Article types Case report
Language English
Peer review Peer reviewed
Title A case of simultaneous tubal-splenic pregnancy after assisted reproductive technology.
Journal Formal name:Fertility and sterility
Abbreviation:Fertil Steril
ISSN code:15565653/00150282
Domestic / ForeginForegin
Volume, Issue, Page 83(4),pp.1042
Author and coauthor Kitade Mari, Takeuchi Hiroyuki, Kikuchi Iwaho, Shimanuki Hiroto, Kumakiri Jun, Kinoshita Katsuyuki
Publication date 2005/04
Summary OBJECTIVE:To present a case of simultaneous splenic and tubal pregnancy following in vitro fertilization.DESIGN:Case report.SETTING:University hospital.PATIENT(S):A 37-year-old woman who had undergone in vitro fertilization and embryo transfer for unexplained infertility at another clinic.INTERVENTION(S):Laparoscopy and laparotomy.MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S):Serum concentration of human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) after salpingosplenectomy.RESULT(S):After transfer of three embryos following fertilization by intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) at another clinic, the patient was referred to our hospital with suspicion of ectopic pregnancy. Because tubal pregnancy was suspected, laparoscopic right salpingectomy was performed. Although villi were detected in the resected fallopian tube, the serum hCG concentration did not decrease after the operation and a new intraabdominal hemorrhage was detected. We then suspected abdominal pregnancy in the epigastric region, and performed magnetic resonance imaging, computed tomography, and ultrasound examinations, which revealed implantation at the inferior pole of the spleen. Splenectomy was performed, with the resulting disappearance of intraabdominal hemorrhage and rapid fall of the serum concentration of hCG.CONCLUSION(S):Assisted reproduction sometimes results in heterotopic pregnancy, but an abdominal pregnancy involving the upper abdominal organs is considered extremely rare. Particularly, splenic pregnancy is usually overlooked and may only be discovered after a sudden intraabdominal hemorrhage. If hemorrhaging is present in the abdominal cavity but pregnancy is not detected within the pelvis, it is advisable to examine patients using imaging techniques to detect any upper abdominal pregnancies.
DOI 10.1016/j.fertnstert.2004.10.047
PMID 15820824