Characteristics and Outcome in Non-Puerperal Uterine Inversion

  • Kesrouani A
  • Cortbaoui E
  • Khaddage A
  • et al.
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Abstract

Chronic non-puerperal uterine inversion is rare and usually associated with uterine pathology with a diagnosis that is challenging. We present the case of a 47-year-old para 4 Caucasian woman with a history of polyfibromatous uterus who was admitted for severe vaginal bleeding for the past 48 hours associated with hemodynamical instability and was refusing any surgery. Pelvic MRI showed the uterus presenting an unusual appearance with a highly vascularized intracavitary leiomyoma protruding through the cervix. Upon deterioration of her status despite an optimal blood transfusion, resuscitation and anti-fibrinolytic treatment, she accepted total abdominal hysterectomy. The diagnosis of uterine inversion was made intraoperatively and confirmed on histopathologic examination. It revealed two side-by-side benign fundal leiomyomas which had collapsed the fundus and protruded partly from the cervix. Non-puerperal chronic inversion of the uterus is rare, and its diagnosis should be based on ultrasound, pelvic MRI and a high index of suspicion, allowing rapid diagnosis and treatment and thus decreasing patient morbidity and mortality.

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Kesrouani, A., Cortbaoui, E., Khaddage, A., Ghossein, M., & Nemr, E. (2021). Characteristics and Outcome in Non-Puerperal Uterine Inversion. Cureus. https://doi.org/10.7759/cureus.13345

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