Obstetrics and gynecology
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In an effort to determine if a changing clinical picture for placenta accreta exists in the late 1970s, 22 cases from January 1, 1975, to May 30, 1979, at Los Angeles County/University of Southern California (LAC/USC) Medical Center were reviewed. An incidence of clinically diagnosed placenta accreta of 1 per 2562 deliveries for all cases and 1 per 4027 for pathologically confirmed cases (ie, hysterectomy specimens) was found. Mean age of the patients was 29.5 years, and mean gravidity, parity, and abortion were 3.4, 2, and 0.27, respectively. ⋯ Hysterectomy was performed on 14 patients, and conservative measures were employed in 8 patients. One maternal death (4.5%) occurred, but there was no perinatal mortality. The clinical picture of placenta accreta today is one of higher reported incidence, lower parity, greater incidence of associated placenta previa, individualized management, and decreasing maternal and perinatal mortality.
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Obstetrics and gynecology · Jul 1980
Case ReportsDysgerminoma of the ovary associated with true hermaphroditism.
A dysgerminoma of the left gonad exhibiting malignant features was diagnosed at laparotomy in a 33-year-old virginal phenotypic female who had a normal menstrual history. Pathologic examination of the contralateral (right) gonad revealed an ovotestis. The nonaffected residual portion of the tumor-bearing left gonad exhibited only ovarian stroma. ⋯ The findings are indicative of true hermaphroditism. The occurrence of dysgerminoma and other tumors in association with various forms of gonadl dysgenesis is discussed. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first reported case of dysgerminoma occurring in a phenotypic female hermaphrodite.