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[T1303]Treatment For Ectopic Pregnancy
by Robert Baird Baird, Rob
The mainstay of treatment for ectopic pregnancy has been surgery. To day, some ectopic pregnancies can be treated with medications that cause the embryo to stop growing and reabsorb into the maternal tissues. Ectopic pregnancies sometimes cure themselves, when the embryo becomes reabsorbed without medication. On occasion an ectopic pregnancy can be watched for a short period of time to see if it can resolve. This is called expectant management, and requires careful monitoring.

The following discussion of treatment for ectopic pregnancy assumes the pregnancy is in the fallopian tube, as this is most common, accounting for about 95 percent of all ectopic pregnancies. When the pregnancy is located in another organ, the treatment will vary somewhat.

The choice of treatment for an ectopic pregnancy will depend on how early in the pregnancy the ectopic is found and how large it is. It will depend on where in the tube the pregnancy is found-whether it is in the part that attaches near the uterus or the part distant from the uterus, near the open end of the tube. Treatment will depend on whether or not the ectopic pregnancy has ruptured out of the tube. It will depend on the extent of bleeding the woman has experienced and whether she is in shock. It will depend on the experience and preference of the physician providing the care. Treatment may depend somewhat on whether the woman desires future fertility, although preservation of her life must be the main consideration.

Surgical treatments for ectopic pregnancy may be performed via a laparoscopy or laparotomy. Oxygen, intravenous fluids, and possibly blood transfusion may be components of needed care.

Salpingectomy and salpingostomy are the surgical procedures used to actually remove the ectopic pregnancy. Salpingectomy means removal of the fallopian tube. Salpingostomy (or salpingotomy) means making an incision in the tube through which the pregnancy is removed. Part of the tube may be removed, with repair accomplished at a later date, after healing has taken place. Salpingostomy is called "conservative" treatment as it saves the tube.

The method of surgical removal depends on the extent of damage to the tube. It also may depend on whether the opposite tube appears normal or diseased and whether the woman wishes to have future pregnancies. A procedure in which the pregnancy was "milked" out of the tube used to be performed if the pregnancy had not ruptured, but recent findings indicate that this procedure results in a very high rate of repeat ectopic pregnancy.

If the other tube appears diseased, then surgery that spares the tube containing the ectopic will increase the likelihood that the woman will be able to get pregnant again and carry the pregnancy. After such conservative surgery, however, there is also a higher risk of a repeat ectopic pregnancy. If the other tube appears normal, then future fertility is likely to be the same whether a salpingectomy or salpingostomy is performed.

Since 1985, medications have provided an alternative to surgery for treatment of ectopic pregnancy. Several medications have been used, most frequently methotrexate-an anticancer drug. Methotrexate works by inhibiting growth of the embryonic cells, in much the same way as it stops growth of cancer cells.

Methotrexate can be used only when the ectopic pregnancy has not ruptured and when the diagnosis was made without surgery. The woman must not show any noticeable signs of blood loss. Her blood values, such as hematocrit and hemoglobin, must be normal and stable. The mass in the tube cannot be larger than three to four centimeters (less than two inches). The woman must be able and willing to return for follow-up care. She must not have medical reasons that make methotrexate dangerous or contraindicated. Such contraindications include breast feeding; diseases of the blood, liver, kidney, lung, or immune system; alcoholism; peptic ulcer disease; or a known allergy to methotrexate.


An ectopic pregnancy is an irregular pregnancy that occurs outside the uterus. Most ectopic pregnancies happen in the fallopian pipe, but implantation can too happen in the cervix, ovaries, and stomach. The causes of ectopic pregnancy are unidentified. There are some speculative specific causes or associations. Smoking, advanced maternal age and prior tubal damage of any origin are well known risk factors for ectopic pregnancy. Ectopic pregnancy occasionally occurs in women who have had a hysterectomy. Rather than implanting in the absent uterus, the fetus implants in the abdomen, and must be delivered via caesarean section. Patients are at higher risk for ectopic pregnancy with advancing age. Vaginal douching is thought by some to increase ectopic pregnancies; this is speculative. Women exposed to diethylstilbestrol in utero also have an elevated risk of ectopic pregnancy, up to 3 times the risk of unexposed women.

In a normal ectopic pregnancy, the embryo does not hit the womb, but instead adheres to the lining of the Fallopian pipe. The implanted embryo burrows actively into the tubal lining. Most usually this invades vessels and will induce bleeding. This bleeding expels the implantation out of the tubal end as a tubal abortion. Many factors are known to increase the risk of having an ectopic pregnancy. Taking hormones, specifically estrogen and progesterone, can slow the normal movement of the fertilized egg through the tubes and lead to ectopic pregnancy. Most women who have had one ectopic pregnancy are later able to have a normal pregnancy. A repeated ectopic pregnancy may occur in 10 - 20% of cases. Women who have in vitro fertilization or who have an intrauterine device using progesterone also have an increased risk of ectopic pregnancy.

Early symptoms are either missing or delicate. Some women thinking they are having an abortion are really having a tubal miscarriage. There is no inflammation of the pipe in ectopic pregnancy. Patients with a late ectopic pregnancy typically experience pain and bleeding. This bleeding will be both vaginal and internal and has two discrete pathophysiologic mechanisms. The pain is caused by prostaglandins released at the implantation site, and by free blood in the peritoneal cavity, which is locally irritant. Sometimes the bleeding might be heavy enough to threaten the health or life of the woman. Later presentations are more common in communities deprived of modern diagnostic ability. An ectopic pregnancy is usually a failing pregnancy and falling levels of progesterone from the corpus luteum on the ovary cause withdrawal bleeding.

An ectopic pregnancy has to be suspected in any woman with lower abdominal pain or unique hemorrhage who is or might be sexually involved and whose pregnancy examination is constructive. If left untreated, about half of ectopic pregnancies will resolve without treatment. These are the tubal abortions. Early treatment of an ectopic pregnancy with the antimetabolite methotrexate has proven to be a viable alternative to surgical treatment. The advent of methotrexate treatment for ectopic pregnancy has reduced the need for surgery, however, surgical intervention is still required in cases where the fallopian tube has ruptured or is in danger of doing so. Surgeons use laparoscopy or laparotomy to gain access to the pelvis and can either incise the affected Fallopian and remove only the pregnancy or remove the affected tube with the pregnancy.

Article Source : Pg. 33

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Both Robert Baird Baird & Juliet Cohen are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.

Robert Baird Baird has sinced written about articles on various topics from Information Technology, Education and Acne Treatment. Get the latest articles related to on
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