You searched for:"Paulo Belfort"
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Revista Brasileira de Ginecologia e Obstetrícia. 2006;28(2):112-121
DOI 10.1590/S0100-72032006000200007
PURPOSE: to investigate the presence and outcome of uterinevascular malformations (UVAM) after gestational trophoblastic disease (GTD). METHODS: retrospective study of 2764 patients with GTD diagnosed from 1987 to 2004. All patients were followed up annually at the "Santa Casa da Misericórdia" Trophoblastic Disease Center (Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil) with transvaginal ultrasonography (US) and color Doppler imaging. Seven patients had a final diagnosis of UVAM based on ultrasonographic analysis - pulsatility index (PI), resistance index (RI), peak systolic velocity (PSV) - and pelvic magnetic nuclear resonance (MNR) findings. Negative beta-hCG values were of utmost importance to establish differential diagnosis with persistent GTD. RESULTS: the incidence of UVAM after GTD was 0.2% (7/2764). US features of UVAM: PI mean 0.44±0,058 (extremes: 0.38-0.52); RI mean 0.36±0.072 (extremes: 0.29-0.50); PSV mean 64.6±23.99 cm/s (extremes: 37-96). MNR image showed a bulky uterus, myometrial inhomogeneity, serpiginous flow-related signal voids, and prominent parametrial vessels. The most common UVAM clinical presentation was vaginal hemorrhage, present in 52.7% (4/7). Pharmacological management with 150 mg medroxyprogesterone acetate was employed to control bleeding, after hemodynamic stabilization. These patients are still being followed and remain asymptomatic nowadays. Two patients with persistent UVAM became pregnant and had successful outcomes. CONCLUSION: patients with antecedent of GTD presenting transvaginal bleeding and negative beta-hCG may be considered to have UVAM and should be investigated through US with Doppler velocimetry. Conservative management is a valuable option in many of the acquired UVAM after GTD.
Summary
Revista Brasileira de Ginecologia e Obstetrícia. 2004;26(7):551-556
DOI 10.1590/S0100-72032004000700007
PURPOSE: to report three cases of gestational trophoblastic disease with intense hemorrhagic complications, in which exceptional surgical procedures were used to obtain hemostasis. METHODS: the study comprised three patients: the first, a young woman, 27 years old, nullipara, was submitted to total abdominal hysterectomy and, thereafter, to chemotherapy until remission was achieved. Another patient bled from an extensive vaginal metastasis that could only be treated with hypogastric arterial ligation. Definitive sustained remission was obtained after chemotherapy. Two years after the episode, the patient achieved a new, normal pregnancy. The third patient, with persistent trophoblastic disease, presented a mass of molar tissue within the uterine inferior segment and cervix, extending to the right vaginal cul-de-sac, heavily bleeding at each attempt of surgical removal, whether by sharp or suction curettage. As a consequence of the invasive maneuvers she became seriously infected with sepsis; although being submitted to intensive antibiotic therapy and total abdominal hysterectomy she died a few days later. RESULTS: of the two patients who were submitted to total abdominal hysterectomy, one survived and the other died of septicemia. The third patient, who was submited to hypogastric arterial ligation, had a favorable outcome and achieved a new and normal pregnancy. CONCLUSION: albeit gestational trophoblastic disease usually has an undisturbed course and spontaneous remission, unexpected complications may demand radical approaches leading sometimes to unfavorable results.
Summary
Revista Brasileira de Ginecologia e Obstetrícia. 2004;26(6):483-488
DOI 10.1590/S0100-72032004000600010
OBJECTIVE: to determine whether the clinical presentation of hydatidiform mole has changed in the recent years (1992-1998) when compared with historic controls (1960-1981). METHODS: medical records of 80 patients with hydatidiform mole attended in the 1960-1981 period (Group I) were reviewed and compared to data from 801 patients followed in the 1992-1998 period (Group II). The clinical signals and symptoms analyzed were: age distribution, number of pregnancies, vaginal bleeding, hyperemesis, edema, hypertension, large uterus for gestation date and theca lutein cysts of the ovaries. Statistical analyses employed chi-square tests and odds ratio (OR) estimate with the confidence interval (CI) of 95%. RESULTS: concerning age, the disease occurred more frequently in group II than in group I, in patients under 15 and over 40 years old. As to the number of pregnancies, there was no statistical difference only in those patients who were in their third or fourth pregnancies. Arterial hypertension was the only symptom that occurred with similar frequency in both groups. Enlarged uterus was more frequent in group II (41.4 X 31.2% - p <0.05; OR: 1.5; IC: 1.0-2.3). Bleeding remained the most common symptom, occurring in 76.9% of patients (Group II), although it has occurred in 98.7% of the historic controls (p<0.05; OR: 0.04; IC: 0.03 0.04). The following symptoms were also less frequent in group II as compared to group I: hyperemesis (36.5% X 45% - p<0.05; OR: 0.7; IC: 0.4 0.9), edema (12.7% X 20% - p<0.05, OR: 0.5, IC: 0.3 0.8), enlarged uterus for gestational age (41.4% x 31.2% - p<0.05; OR: 1.5; IC: 1.0 2.3) and theca lutein cysts (16.4% X 41.2% - p<0.05; OR: 0.3; IC: 0.2 0.4). Ultrasound has become the commonest method of diagnosis (89.2% - p<0.05), allowing early detection of hydatidiform moles. CONCLUSION: there was a decrease of the traditional symptoms in current patients with hydatidiform mole as compared to historic controls, due to early diagnosis through ultrasonography.
Summary
Revista Brasileira de Ginecologia e Obstetrícia. 2003;25(1):61-66
DOI 10.1590/S0100-72032003000100009
PURPOSE: to study the frequency of recurrent gestational trophoblastic neoplasm and to analyze whether the features and the outcome of the repetitive disease lead to a higher risk of invasion or of malignization and the need for more courses of chemotherapy and more aggressive regimens. METHODS: twenty-nine patients with recurrent hydatidiform mole were followed up at the Santa Casa da Misericórdia Trophoblastic Disease Center (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) between 1960 and 2001, showing an incidence of 1.28% (29/2262). The medical charts were examined to determine the patient's age, number of pregnancies, parity, clinical presentation and chemotherapy. A total of fifty-eight trophoblastic neoplasm episodes occurred in these 29 patients and all were reviewed regarding their pathology. Statistical data were determined by the chi2 test with Yates correction and analysis was performed using Epi-Info software for Windows 2000. RESULTS: invasive mole or choriocarcinoma occurred at the first event of hydatidiform mole in only one patient (1/29 - 3.44%), whereas invasion or malignization occurred in the second event in seven patients (7/29 - 24,13%) [OR: 8.9; CI 95%: 1.5 - 41; p<0.05]. CONCLUSION: recurrent molar pregnancy was associated with histological worsening and an increase in the incidence of proliferative trophoblastic sequelae in the consecutive episodes of hydatidiform mole, more frequent and aggressive chemotherapy being necessary.