. Annual of the universal medical sciences. view. He also disagrees with Olliauscn and Reed as ^to the advisability of the removal of the uninfected ovary and tube. ?As a result of this conservative treatment, subsequent pregnancy ihas occurred in two cases: on(> ])a,ticnt was delivered of two living children, and the other was in the seventh month of pregnancy. ; Ectopic -jGestation. J DISEASES OF OVARIES AND TUBES. G-43 MackenrodtUnreports a case of double tubal pregnancy. Onepregnancy occurred in May, 1890, operation being refused. Thepatient was able to leave her bed in two montlis, sti
. Annual of the universal medical sciences. view. He also disagrees with Olliauscn and Reed as ^to the advisability of the removal of the uninfected ovary and tube. ?As a result of this conservative treatment, subsequent pregnancy ihas occurred in two cases: on(> ])a,ticnt was delivered of two living children, and the other was in the seventh month of pregnancy. ; Ectopic -jGestation. J DISEASES OF OVARIES AND TUBES. G-43 MackenrodtUnreports a case of double tubal pregnancy. Onepregnancy occurred in May, 1890, operation being refused. Thepatient was able to leave her bed in two montlis, still sufferingfrom peritoneal adhesions. In September, 1891, the menses wereagain absent; at the end of October there was irregular bleedingand sharp pains in the left side, for which operation was done;the left tube contained an ovum unmistakable on both macroscopicand microscopic examination. On the right side, in a cavityadherent to the intestine, and into which the right tube opened,were found the small bones of the foetal Fig. 2.—Utero-Abdominai, Pregnancy. A to E, same as Fig. 1; F, location at which gestation sac communicated with uterine cavity. (Annals of Oyncecology and Pcediatry.) 23 Oct.,91 Utero-Abdominal Gelation.—Fullerton, of Philadelphia,reports a case of utero-abdominal pregnancy in which the last men-strual period occurred March, 1890. The patient had a fall thefollowing September, succeeded by severe paroxysms of pain, lead-ing her to fear she was about to abort. These pains subsided,and she suffered no further untoward symptoms. Labor-pains setin, apparently, September 7, 1890, when there was a free dischargeof watery fluid mixed with blood. Pains continued for two weeks,when they ceased entirely. She suffered from a bloody discharge,and later a dark-brown fluid persisted np to the time she wasadmitted to the hospital, in April, 1891. The operation was doneon the 18th of May, when a tumor, of a dark-grayish color, not G-U MONTGOMERY. [c-fSJ,
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