A case report of delayed diagnosis of uterine rupture following vaginal delivery

Introduction: A uterine rupture is still a rare event but its incidence appears to be increasing, even in the unscarred uterus. In our case, the uterine rupture presented itself in an unscarred uterus and after a vaginal delivery. Case report: A 36 years old women with three previous normal deliver...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Vanessa Falé Rosado, Sara Rocha, Catarina Vasconcelos, Maria Luisa Martins, Maria José Alves
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Bulgarian Association of Young Surgeons 2017-08-01
Series:International Journal of Medical Reviews and Case Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ejmanager.com/fulltextpdf.php?mno=271842
id doaj-9c6c422733674c7d815059aece636545
record_format Article
spelling doaj-9c6c422733674c7d815059aece6365452020-11-24T23:34:02ZengBulgarian Association of Young Surgeons International Journal of Medical Reviews and Case Reports2534-98212534-98212017-08-0112364010.5455/IJMRCR.uterine-rupture-delayed-diagnosisA case report of delayed diagnosis of uterine rupture following vaginal deliveryVanessa Falé RosadoSara RochaCatarina VasconcelosMaria Luisa MartinsMaria José AlvesIntroduction: A uterine rupture is still a rare event but its incidence appears to be increasing, even in the unscarred uterus. In our case, the uterine rupture presented itself in an unscarred uterus and after a vaginal delivery. Case report: A 36 years old women with three previous normal deliveries, comes to our hospital for assistance at 32 weeks with a poor pregnancy surveillance. After diagnosing Gestational Diabetes, she is admitted for therapeutic adjustment. She is discharged after achieving metabolic control but comes back a few days later with a stillbirth, born by vaginal delivery. Six days later she presents with: fever and pain; anemia leukocytosis and a heterogeneous image on ultrasound. However, was decided to start intravenous antibiotics before choosing for surgery. Her condition worsens and an exploratory laparotomy is done: a posterior uterine wall rupture that required a hysterectomy. Conclusion: Risk factors for uterine rupture were present (maternal age over 35, higher parity, fetal macrosomia) but the absence of any symptom, the normal examination after delivery, and mostly, an unscarred uterus, resulted in a delay in the diagnosis of more than one week, leading to catastrophic consequences: hysterectomy. This case reminds us that uterine rupture happens not only in case of previous uterine surgery, and these cases seem to be increasing because of the increase in other risk factors: advanced maternal age and diabetes with resulting fetal macrosomia.http://www.ejmanager.com/fulltextpdf.php?mno=271842uterine rupturehysterectomypostpartum period
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vanessa Falé Rosado
Sara Rocha
Catarina Vasconcelos
Maria Luisa Martins
Maria José Alves
spellingShingle Vanessa Falé Rosado
Sara Rocha
Catarina Vasconcelos
Maria Luisa Martins
Maria José Alves
A case report of delayed diagnosis of uterine rupture following vaginal delivery
International Journal of Medical Reviews and Case Reports
uterine rupture
hysterectomy
postpartum period
author_facet Vanessa Falé Rosado
Sara Rocha
Catarina Vasconcelos
Maria Luisa Martins
Maria José Alves
author_sort Vanessa Falé Rosado
title A case report of delayed diagnosis of uterine rupture following vaginal delivery
title_short A case report of delayed diagnosis of uterine rupture following vaginal delivery
title_full A case report of delayed diagnosis of uterine rupture following vaginal delivery
title_fullStr A case report of delayed diagnosis of uterine rupture following vaginal delivery
title_full_unstemmed A case report of delayed diagnosis of uterine rupture following vaginal delivery
title_sort case report of delayed diagnosis of uterine rupture following vaginal delivery
publisher Bulgarian Association of Young Surgeons
series International Journal of Medical Reviews and Case Reports
issn 2534-9821
2534-9821
publishDate 2017-08-01
description Introduction: A uterine rupture is still a rare event but its incidence appears to be increasing, even in the unscarred uterus. In our case, the uterine rupture presented itself in an unscarred uterus and after a vaginal delivery. Case report: A 36 years old women with three previous normal deliveries, comes to our hospital for assistance at 32 weeks with a poor pregnancy surveillance. After diagnosing Gestational Diabetes, she is admitted for therapeutic adjustment. She is discharged after achieving metabolic control but comes back a few days later with a stillbirth, born by vaginal delivery. Six days later she presents with: fever and pain; anemia leukocytosis and a heterogeneous image on ultrasound. However, was decided to start intravenous antibiotics before choosing for surgery. Her condition worsens and an exploratory laparotomy is done: a posterior uterine wall rupture that required a hysterectomy. Conclusion: Risk factors for uterine rupture were present (maternal age over 35, higher parity, fetal macrosomia) but the absence of any symptom, the normal examination after delivery, and mostly, an unscarred uterus, resulted in a delay in the diagnosis of more than one week, leading to catastrophic consequences: hysterectomy. This case reminds us that uterine rupture happens not only in case of previous uterine surgery, and these cases seem to be increasing because of the increase in other risk factors: advanced maternal age and diabetes with resulting fetal macrosomia.
topic uterine rupture
hysterectomy
postpartum period
url http://www.ejmanager.com/fulltextpdf.php?mno=271842
work_keys_str_mv AT vanessafalerosado acasereportofdelayeddiagnosisofuterinerupturefollowingvaginaldelivery
AT sararocha acasereportofdelayeddiagnosisofuterinerupturefollowingvaginaldelivery
AT catarinavasconcelos acasereportofdelayeddiagnosisofuterinerupturefollowingvaginaldelivery
AT marialuisamartins acasereportofdelayeddiagnosisofuterinerupturefollowingvaginaldelivery
AT mariajosealves acasereportofdelayeddiagnosisofuterinerupturefollowingvaginaldelivery
AT vanessafalerosado casereportofdelayeddiagnosisofuterinerupturefollowingvaginaldelivery
AT sararocha casereportofdelayeddiagnosisofuterinerupturefollowingvaginaldelivery
AT catarinavasconcelos casereportofdelayeddiagnosisofuterinerupturefollowingvaginaldelivery
AT marialuisamartins casereportofdelayeddiagnosisofuterinerupturefollowingvaginaldelivery
AT mariajosealves casereportofdelayeddiagnosisofuterinerupturefollowingvaginaldelivery
_version_ 1725529883471249408