Sunday 5 August 2012

The blood test results of ectopic pregnancy can save the family


The blood test results of ectopic pregnancy can save the family
In a new study, researchers have developed a screening of blood for ectopic pregnancy that could save thousands of infertile women. life threatening condition can be diagnosed in one day thanks to this test, instead of several weeks. Ectopic pregnancy occurs when the fetus implants outside the uterus, usually in a fallopian tube.
the child can be saved from ectopic pregnancy, but if conditions are diagnosed in time can be bad for the mother. New blood test will allow physicians to intervene early to save the reproductive organs which are often severely damaged condition.




About one in 80 is increased ectopic pregnancy in one of sixty, sixty women over thirty years. number of ectopic pregnancies has tripled over the past two decades. factor that may be delaying fertility patterns in women. If left untreated embryos in the fallopian tube can rupture and halve the possibility of pregnancy.


Currently, a blood test and ultrasound is used to detect errors, but these techniques are not appropriate in the first stage and subsequent pregnancies. However, a blood test may be appropriate in only three weeks of pregnancy. This would allow women and acute surgery to remove dirt and reduce the chances that the damaged fallopian tube.


a blood test checks for the four indicators in the blood that is a sign of ectopic pregnancy, is developed by doctors at the University of Pennsylvania Medical United States. This possibility could be that of a test in early pregnancy could use to identify the ectopic pregnancy, said Dr. Marie Rausch.

If the ectopic pregnancy is diagnosed definitively could have cured immediately, he said, while addressing the American Society for Reproductive Medicine meeting in Denver, Colorado. About forty percent of women with ectopic pregnancy usually can not have children later.


This test is potentially useful for the investigation at the beginning. It would be appealing to determine whether these results are promising, they are borne in large study, said Patrick O'Brien, Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.

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