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Obstetrics and Gynecology Clinics of North America, 2015
Placenta accreta can lead to hemorrhage, resulting in hysterectomy, blood transfusion, multiple organ failure, and death. Accreta has been increasing steadily in incidence owing to an increase in the cesarean delivery rate. Major risk factors are placenta previa in women with prior cesarean deliveries.
Kelli Barbour, Robert M. Silver
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Placenta accreta can lead to hemorrhage, resulting in hysterectomy, blood transfusion, multiple organ failure, and death. Accreta has been increasing steadily in incidence owing to an increase in the cesarean delivery rate. Major risk factors are placenta previa in women with prior cesarean deliveries.
Kelli Barbour, Robert M. Silver
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PLACENTA ACCRETA. A TWENTY YEAR REVIEW
Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey, 1972Abstract Five cases of placenta accreta were reviewed at the Queen of Angels Hospital in Los Angeles, California, for a period beginning January 1, 1950, and two cases were reviewed from Temple Hospital in Los Angeles from 1948 to 1965. During that time, there were 70,966 deliveries at Queen of Angels Hospital and 19,009 at Temple Hospital.
Leroy R. Weekes, Lloyd B. Greig
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JAMA, 1961
PLACENTA PREVIA ACCRETA may be defined as the morbid adherence of a placenta situated in the lower segment of the uterus. Placenta increta and placenta percreta refer to invasion of the myometrium, or the myometrium and peritoneum, respectively. The invasive process may involve all or part of the placental surface. The name placenta previa accreta was
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PLACENTA PREVIA ACCRETA may be defined as the morbid adherence of a placenta situated in the lower segment of the uterus. Placenta increta and placenta percreta refer to invasion of the myometrium, or the myometrium and peritoneum, respectively. The invasive process may involve all or part of the placental surface. The name placenta previa accreta was
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Placenta Accreta, Percreta and Praevia Accreta
Australian and New Zealand Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, 1978Summary: Placenta accreta is a rare complication of pregnancy which contributes significantly to maternal morbidity and mortality. Five cases are presented which illustrate different modes of presentation and problems of management; one of the patients (with placenta praevia accreta) died following Caesarean section and subtotal hysterectomy.
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Anesthetic Considerations for Placenta Accreta
Obstetric Anesthesia Digest, 2011When diagnosed antenatally placenta accreta has often been managed by cesarean hysterectomy, but recently techniques involving uterine preservation have been developed. Uterine artery embolization has become an adjuvant treatment, although the potential for obstetric hemorrhage still exists. A multidisciplinary approach has permitted the development of
A.J. Macarthur+3 more
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Medical Journal of Australia, 1981
Placenta praevia accreta is a rare life-threatening complication of pregnancy. Four cases are presented from one hospital over a period of 10 years in which there were 36 608 deliveries, an incidence of one in 9152 (0.011%). In all cases there was a successful outcome for both mother and baby, despite different forms of management.
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Placenta praevia accreta is a rare life-threatening complication of pregnancy. Four cases are presented from one hospital over a period of 10 years in which there were 36 608 deliveries, an incidence of one in 9152 (0.011%). In all cases there was a successful outcome for both mother and baby, despite different forms of management.
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2018
The rising rates of cesarean delivery in recent years have led to an increase in the diagnosis of placenta accreta, increta, and percreta. A high index of suspicion and prenatal imaging are critical for identifying patients at risk and planning for delivery.
Mary E. D'Alton, Leslie Moroz
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The rising rates of cesarean delivery in recent years have led to an increase in the diagnosis of placenta accreta, increta, and percreta. A high index of suspicion and prenatal imaging are critical for identifying patients at risk and planning for delivery.
Mary E. D'Alton, Leslie Moroz
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Placenta Previa, Placenta Accreta, and Vasa Previa
Obstetrics & Gynecology, 2006Placenta previa, placenta accreta, and vasa previa are important causes of bleeding in the second half of pregnancy and in labor. Risk factors for placenta previa include prior cesarean delivery, pregnancy termination, intrauterine surgery, smoking, multifetal gestation, increasing parity, and maternal age.
John C. Smulian, Yinka Oyelese
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Placenta Previa and Placenta Accreta
2011The term placenta previa refers to a placenta that is abnormally located in the lower part of the uterus, often covering the cervix. The words are derived from the Latin pre, meaning before, and via, which comes from the same derivation as “viaduct” and “avenue,” meaning passageway.
Yinka Oyelese, Joseph Canterino
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Always be vigilant for placenta accreta
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 2014erhaps there is no greater obstetrical surgical challenge P than that of managing a delivery complicated by placenta accreta. Placenta accreta results from a defect of the decidua basalis, which allows invasive placental implantation into varying depths of the myometrium, thus preventing normal separation of the placenta from the uterine wall at the ...
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