View clinical trials related to Placenta Percreta.
Filter by:This study aimed to evaluate the short-term and long-term complications of placenta percreta with bladder invasion. This evaluation focuses on cases where bladder dissection and ACAR-style bladder sutures were applied in cases of placenta percreta with bladder invasion that underwent uterine-sparing surgery or hysterectomy.
The rotational thromboelastogram (ROTEM) test can be performed on patients with placenta previa/accreta/increta/percreta who have a high likelihood of massive bleeding, and the predictors can be identified by comparing the patients who actually show massive bleeding with those who do not. Applying these predictive factors to pregnant women undergoing cesarean section after diagnosis of placenta previa/accreta/increta/percreta, it will be advantageous for the perioperative management because it is possible to select pregnant women with a factor of massive bleeding.
This trial is set to detect the impact of bilateral internal iliac artery ligation on the amount of intra-operative blood loss during the hysterectomy procedure done for the management of abnormally invasive placenta
Placenta percreta is a life-threatening condition that patients are under risk of massive bleeding. It readily necessitates very complicated surgery even leads to mortality. Cesarean hysterectomy is the procedure that is acknowledged worldwide, however, recent studies discussing conservative treatment with segmental resections were published. Fetal extraction and segmental resection could be performed from same (single uterine incision) or two different (double uterine incision) incisions. In this study, the investigators aimed to evaluate the effectiveness and the results of double uterine incision.