Saturday, December 03, 2022
MRCOG Part Two: 3 Ws & General Advice
Saturday, November 05, 2022
Oophorectomy or Ovarian Conservation at Hysterectomy for Benign Disease
This blog post is based on the TOG article Oophorectomy or Ovarian Conservation at the Time of Hysterectomy for Benign Disease published in April 2022. This is one of the important and most debated aspects of the care of women undergoing hysterectomy due to benign conditions. This has almost always been a grey area in gynaecology, where clinical evaluation and judgment plays an essential role in the crucial decision to conserve or remove ovaries in women above the age of 40 years. This article provides the latest evidence related to this topic.
I hope you will find this quick summary helpful not only the exam preparation but also for your clinical practice as well.
Thanks.
To download the original article: Click Here
To access ALL TOGs: Click Here
Introduction
- When a perimenopausal or menopausal woman is undergoing a hysterectomy for benign conditions, one of the concerns is whether to remove or conserve the ovaries. Leaving the ovaries can be associated with the risk of ovarian cancer later in life. However, the removal is also associated with some ill effects. All this will be discussed as follows.
Ovarian cancer has poor prognosis
- Diagnosis of cancer at 70 years — associated with 80% mortality
- Incidence — increases with age 10 in 100 000 in 40s 50 in 100 000 in 50s
- > 50% of women diagnosed at the advanced metastatic disease
- The lifetime risk of ovarian cancer - 1.4%
- With hereditary ovarian cancer syndromes risk is 25-50% for epithelial ovarian cancer
- BRCA mutation — associated with 90% of hereditary ovarian cancers but overall makeup only 10-15% of all ovarian cancers
- If this high-risk group is excluded, then the incidence for low-risk women <1%
Non-inherited risk factors
- Obesity & PCO
- Ovarian endometriosis can transform into cancer in 2.5% of cases
Ovarian function in the menopause
- Ovaries continue their endocrine function
- After menopause, women with intact ovaries have higher amounts of androgens
Saturday, October 15, 2022
Advanced Abdominal Pregnancy
This blog post comprises of important points taken from the TOG article ‘Advanced abdominal pregnancy’ published in July 2022. It is strongly recommended to read the full article to have a complete understanding of this topic as this post is just a quick summary.
To download the original article: Click Here
To access ALL TOGs: Click Here
Introduction
- Abdominal pregnancy — when implantation occurs within abdominal cavity / an extra uterine pregnancy in which all or most of the foetus develops within the abdominal cavity
- A rare form of ectopic pregnancy
- Incidence ~1% of all ectopic pregnancies
- Associated maternal mortality 0-12%
- Overall risk of maternal death 7x that of ectopic pregnancy 90x that of an intrauterine pregnancy
- Fetal survival >78%
Classification
Based on gestation at diagnosis
- Early Abdominal Pregnancy (EAP) - before 20 weeks
- Advanced Abdominal Pregnancy (AAP) - after 20 weeks
Based on site of implantation
- Primary abdominal pregnancy — implantation directly occurs in the abdominal cavity
- Secondary abdominal pregnancy — when conception extruded from its primary site of implantation and re-implants in abdominal cavity (usually after ruptured ectopic)
Risk Factors
- Most have no identifiable risk factors
- Risk factors are same as any other ectopic pregnancy — tubal pathology, in situ IUCD, previous ectopic
- Uterine anomalies & history of previous uterine surgery (esp CS) are associated with abdominal pregnancy
- AAP can also occur post scar rupture, previous myomectomy and post uterine perforation at surgical TOP, after IVF
Clinical Presentation
- Diagnosis is often missed & usually made after fetal demise
- Only 50% diagnosed before surgery
- High suspicion is key to pre-operative diagnosis
- No specific S&S of AAP
Symptoms
- Commonest presentation — abdominal pain ± vaginal bleeding (pain often persistent & increases by fetal movements)
- Bloating & vomiting
Signs
- None pathognomonic
- Reasonable sign of AAP - displaced cervix (anteriorly)
- Others— severe anaemia, abnormal fetal lie, oligohydramnios, SGA
Ultrasound
- Abdominal pregnancy hard to diagnose with advancing gestation
- Any first-trimester scan should include - location of gestational sac in relation to cervix, endometrial cavity and uterus
- Intraabdominal pregnancy suspected on USG — extrauterine amniotic sac & an empty uterine cavity - foetus & placenta outside uterus, lack of uterine myometrium around foetus
- Skills & techniques of sonographer matters
Saturday, September 10, 2022
Patient Information Leaflets Links
Kindly have a look through this page as well: Medical Terms Explained
Wednesday, August 10, 2022
Domestic Violence
This blog post is a Quick Note on Domestic Violence, one of the vital topics for MRCOG exams. The points have been taken from various resources including NICE and TOGs.
I hope this post is helpful for you.
Please feel free to leave your feedback and suggestion for new blog posts are welcome.
Thanks
www.rubabk4courses.com/courses |
Introduction
- Abuse of an individual >16 yrs by a current or former partner or family member, regardless of gender or sexuality
- It could be Physical Emotional Psychological Financial or Sexual
Worldwide 1 in 3 women experienced DV b/w 2000-18
UK figures
- Incidence 1:4 lifetime risk DV
- 2 women per wk murdered by partner/ex
- 30% of DV starts or escalates in pregnancy
- 4-9% during pregnancy ± after childbirth
Dec 2020 Ref TOG
- Due to the Covid-19 pandemic → there was a 7% ↑ in the total number of domestic abuse-related offences
- Helpline calls ↑ by up to 5-fold
Impact of DV
- Devastating for the health and well-being of women
- Associated with ↑ risk of poor current health, chronic disease, substance abuse and also a negative impact on mental health
- Also an issue of child protection
- 10% of postnatal depression attributable to DV & abuse
- Victims are 4x more likely to have anxiety disorders and a 7-fold increased likelihood of PTSD
Adverse Effects of DV on pregnancy outcomes
- Preterm birth, chorioamnionitis, low birth weight baby, unexplained stillbirth
Factors in pregnancy linked to increased risk of DV
- Teenager
- Late booker
- Concealed Pregnancy
- Bleeding in early pregnancy
- Substance abuse
- Having pre-existing mental health conditions like PND, anxiety & PTSD
Why do women hesitate to seek help?
Fear of
- stigma or shame
- HCP not believing them
- the consequences
Possible Signs COULD BE ANYTHING
- Vague symptoms Frequent visits
- Missed visits Late bookers
- Non-compliance with t/m
- Suicidal attempts
- Partner attends unnecessarily
NICE recommendations for DV
- All healthcare providers MUST ask about DV every woman
- Mandatory training for safeguarding vulnerable adults & children
- Screening increases the identification of DV
- Women to be given enough time and opportunity for disclosure
- Consultations are to be conducted in an open, supportive and non-judgmental way
- If identified, refer to specialist services, ensure safety and arrange follow-up
- Support groups are KEY
- Must ensure confidentiality
- Information should be shared among HCP for safeguarding purposes
UK Domestic Abuse Act 2021
- Helps to provide greater support
- DV is not just physical violence but could also be emotional, controlling, coercive and economic
- Local authorities to provide accommodation-based support
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