RESUMO
Colposcopy and biopsy were performed in 97 patients whose referral smears showed mild dysplasia (CIN 1). Of 97 women, 40 (41.2%) had a biopsy or a colposcopic examination alone considered normal, 36 (37.1%) had CIN 1 or HPV changes, 12 (12.4%) had CIN 2 and 9 (9.3%) had CIN 3. No invasive cancer was detected. This data suggest that, if colposcopy resources are available, repeat smear alone is inadequate to follow women who have a mild dysplasia smear.
Assuntos
Displasia do Colo do Útero/diagnóstico , Biópsia , Colo do Útero/patologia , Colposcopia , Diagnóstico Diferencial , Feminino , Humanos , Displasia do Colo do Útero/patologia , Neoplasias do Colo do Útero/diagnóstico , Esfregaço VaginalRESUMO
We have taken into consideration the obstetric outcome in 173 women, with prior cesarean section, who were delivered in our hospital between june 1988 and january 1991. This group of patients represented 5.3% of our obstetric population. Overall 64 patients (37%) achieved vaginal delivery and 109 (63%) underwent an iterative cesarean section. Considering the 76 patients (44%) admitted to trial of labour, 64 (84.2%) achieved vaginal delivery and 12 (15.8%) were delivered with iterative cesarean section. No maternal or neonatal complications occurred, even though the silent dehiscence of the uterine scar, found during cesarean section, seems to occur four times (12%) more frequently than that reported in recent literature. It follows that vaginal delivery after prior cesarean section is, in our experience, lacking in risks, and we think that such management may be widely adopted. In 1986 iterative cesarean section represented 35% of cesarean section indications, in 1990 this rate was reduced to 23.7% by the introduction of a policy to allow women to undergo trial of labour.
Assuntos
Nascimento Vaginal Após Cesárea , Cesárea , Feminino , Humanos , Complicações do Trabalho de Parto/prevenção & controle , Gravidez , Nascimento Vaginal Após Cesárea/estatística & dados numéricosRESUMO
The use of outpatient diagnostic hysteroscopy is discussed with reference to a series of 425 women. The test was performed in an outpatient setting with no form of analgesia, anesthesia or premedication in 385 patients (90.6%); the degree of acceptability was very low (intolerable) in 5.5%, supportable in 15.8% and excellent in 78.7% of patients. Fourty-two per cent of patients were aged between 45 and 54 years old, and the mean age was 47.5 years with a range between 18 and 83 years. The indication for the test was pre- or postmenopausal anomalous uterine bleeding in 74% of patients. Hysteroscopic diagnosis was normal in 56% of cases; endometrial polyps were diagnosed in 11.4% of patients; myomas in 11%; low-risk hyperplasia in 9.9% and malignant tumours in 3.6%. The correlation between hysteroscopic diagnosis and histological tests was above 95% in cases of malignant tumours, atrophy and functional endometrium, whereas it was 67% in cases of low-risk hyperplasia. No accidents or complications related to hysteroscopy were reported.