Ilan E Timor-Tritsch, Francesco D'Antonio, A Monteagudo
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
In the last decades, clinicians reported that patients, after failed or terminated intrauterine or cesarean scar pregnancies, demonstrated increased vascularization of the adjacent uterine muscle layers by ultrasound (US). These "earned" the incorrect diagnosis: uterine arterio-venous malformation (AVM). This misnomer was used without etiologic scrutiny by clinicians and repeated in scientific articles and textbooks. Despite the articles written during the same 10-20 years which tried to encourage caretakers of patients to relinquish the term AVM and use the correct term of enhanced myometrial vascularity (EMV). There still is a degree of ignorance as well as a knowledge gap in the obstetrical and radiological community as to the etiology, pathophysiology, and management of the above clinical entity. This article contains previously published, relevant ultrasound-based data on the subject along with our clinical experience highlighted by examples. We aim to fill this gap by providing illustrative clinical cases of the tools we consider relevant to the clinical diagnosis and management of EMV. We emphasize, that in the majority of cases expectant approach, avoids complications resulting from misdiagnosis and unnecessary treatment as well as pointing out the diagnostic importance of determining the parameters in guiding their treatment.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine (JUM) is dedicated to the rapid, accurate publication of original articles dealing with all aspects of medical ultrasound, particularly its direct application to patient care but also relevant basic science, advances in instrumentation, and biological effects. The journal is an official publication of the American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine and publishes articles in a variety of categories, including Original Research papers, Review Articles, Pictorial Essays, Technical Innovations, Case Series, Letters to the Editor, and more, from an international bevy of countries in a continual effort to showcase and promote advances in the ultrasound community.
Represented through these efforts are a wide variety of disciplines of ultrasound, including, but not limited to:
-Basic Science-
Breast Ultrasound-
Contrast-Enhanced Ultrasound-
Dermatology-
Echocardiography-
Elastography-
Emergency Medicine-
Fetal Echocardiography-
Gastrointestinal Ultrasound-
General and Abdominal Ultrasound-
Genitourinary Ultrasound-
Gynecologic Ultrasound-
Head and Neck Ultrasound-
High Frequency Clinical and Preclinical Imaging-
Interventional-Intraoperative Ultrasound-
Musculoskeletal Ultrasound-
Neurosonology-
Obstetric Ultrasound-
Ophthalmologic Ultrasound-
Pediatric Ultrasound-
Point-of-Care Ultrasound-
Public Policy-
Superficial Structures-
Therapeutic Ultrasound-
Ultrasound Education-
Ultrasound in Global Health-
Urologic Ultrasound-
Vascular Ultrasound