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Industry: Email Alert RSS FeedDiagnosis and Treatment of a Ruptured Ectopic Pregnancy in a Combat Support Hospital during Operation Iraqi Freedom: Case Report and Critique of a Field-Ready Sonographic Device
Military Medicine, Sep 2004 by Stamilio, David M, McReynolds, Tamara, Endrizzi, Joseph, Lyons, Robert C
This case report describes a novel diagnostic approach for ectopic pregnancy in a combat environment. We diagnosed a ruptured ectopic pregnancy at our combat support hospital by using the SonoSite 180 Plus ultrasound device (SonoSite, Bothell, WA). The live ectopic pregnancy was immediately identified and the entire pelvic anatomy was easily assessed within 5 minutes. The SonoSite ultrasound device proved to be easy to use, durable, and reliable. It produced high-quality images in a variety of applications. The handheld SonoSite 180 ultrasound device is sufficiently portable to be used effectively in a combat support hospital or field situation, such as a forward surgical team. This combat experience suggests that a handheld ultrasound device may also have great utility during patient transport for civilian hospitals.
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Introduction
This case report describes a novel diagnostic instrument and a unique environment for a common obstetric complication, namely, ectopic pregnancy. The surgical case described occurred in a combat support hospital (CSH) during Operation Iraqi Freedom. To our knowledge, this is the first reported ectopic pregnancy to be diagnosed with a field-ready, handheld, portable ultrasound device and definitively treated in a CSH. We diagnosed the ectopic pregnancy with a handheld SonoSite 180 Plus ultrasound machine (SonoSite, Bothell, WA), which provided high-quality observation of the pathologic condition. We describe clinical techniques adapted for the combat environment and critique the portable handheld ultrasound machine as a field device for combat.
Case Report
The patient, a 27-year-old, gravida 2, para 1-0-0-1 active duty woman in the U.S. Army was transported to the 21st CSH emergency department for evacuation from the Operation Iraqi Freedom combat zone for a first-trimester pregnancy, according to theater policy. The patient had been deployed to the Central Command area of operation 7 to 8 weeks before presenting to the 21st CSH. Upon presentation to the 21st CSH, the patient complained of nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, pelvic pain, and bloating for 2 weeks, without vaginal bleeding, anorexia, or fever. The pelvic pain had increased acutely 2 days before presentation, at which point physicians at a remote clinic diagnosed the patient with a pregnancy via a urine human chorionic gonadotropin assay. They also diagnosed a urinary tract infection via urinalysis. The patient's last normal menses had been 7 to 8 weeks earlier, in early March 2003, but she had experienced brief vaginal bleeding 4 weeks earlier, on April 13 to 14, 2003. Her first pregnancy was uncomplicated and resulted in normal spontaneous vaginal delivery of a healthy term neonate. The patient was heterozygous for factor V Leiden. She had no history of thrombophilia-related, adverse obstetric outcomes or medical complications. She had experienced a single episode of genital herpes simplex virus outbreak; her medical history was otherwise unremarkable. She had undergone eye surgery as a child, without complications. She had no known allergies. She did not use tobacco or illegal drugs. She was taking oral doxycycline for malaria prophylaxis and an unknown oral contraceptive. The physical examination revealed benign results, except for mild abdominal and adnexal tenderness without guarding, rebound tenderness, or cervical motion tenderness. The uterus was approximately 6-week size, with a palpable 5-cm left adnexal mass. On the basis of these clinical findings, the emergency medicine physician consulted the gynecologist. A transvaginal ultrasound examination (SonoSite 180 Plus; SonoSite) in the emergency room revealed a large amount of fluid in the posterior cul de sac, an empty uterus, a 4-cm simple right ovarian cyst, and a gestational sac that appeared to be in the distal left fallopian tube or ovary. A fetal pole with cardiac activity and a yolk sac were noted. The crown-rump length (10.9 mm) was consistent with a gestational age of 7 weeks 1 day (Figs. 1 and 2). The patient was counseled regarding the risks of ectopic pregnancy and the risks and benefits of surgery. After informed consent was obtained, the patient was immediately taken to the operating room for an exploratory laparotomy through a Pfannenstiel incision. Upon entry into the peritoneum, a large amount of blood (500 ml) was noted and evacuated from the abdomen and pelvis. After establishment of good observation of the pelvic anatomy, a left distal ampullary pregnancy was identified. The pregnancy had ruptured the fallopian tube and was in the process of aborting into the abdomen. The pregnancy was manually removed from the tube and hemostasis was achieved, with eare not to distort the tube or fimbria further. A salpingectomy was not performed because the tubal damage was isolated to a small portion of the distal ampulla. In an examination of the products of conception, a small fetus and an intact gestational sac were observed. Because the surgery was performed in a CSH, the patient received intravenous cefazolin intraoperatively and postoperatively. Her hematocrit decreased from 38.3% preoperatively to 29.1% postoperatively. The patient had an uncomplicated postoperative course and was evacuated to the United States on postoperative day 3 for additional convalescence.
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