Pregnancy with uterine myomatosis complicated by intestinal ischemia: Case report

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Abstract

Uterine fibroids, also known as fibroids or leiomyomas, are the most prevalent benign uterine tumors, affecting women mainly during their reproductive years and are diagnosed in up to 70% of white women and more than 80% of women of African descent during their lifetime, with a prevalence during pregnancy of 2% to 10%; they may be asymptomatic in up to 70% of patients, and it is estimated that complications may occur in approximately one in 10 pregnant women. They have been associated with complications and adverse pregnancy outcomes, depending on their size and location in the uterus, they can manifest in different ways. We present the case of a 30-year-old woman, pregnant in the third trimester, who consulted for abdominal pain, with obstetric ultrasound scans during her prenatal check-up reporting uterine myomatosis, who presented intestinal ischemia due to small bowel volvulus versus extrinsic compression.

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Tabares-Gallego, A. J., & Velásquez-Trujillo, P. A. (2022). Pregnancy with uterine myomatosis complicated by intestinal ischemia: Case report. Revista Chilena de Obstetricia y Ginecologia, 87(2), 152–157. https://doi.org/10.24875/RECHOG.21000057

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