Interstitial and Cornual Ectopic Pregnancy: Conservative Surgical and Medical Management

2018 
Background Interstitial and cornual ectopic pregnancy is rare, accounting for 2–4% of ectopic pregnancies and remains the most difficult type of ectopic pregnancy to diagnose due to low sensitivity and specificity of symptoms and imaging. The classic triad of ectopic pregnancy—abdominal pain, amenorrhea and vaginal bleeding—occurs in less than 40% of patients. The site of implantation in the intrauterine portion of fallopian tube and invasion through the uterine wall make this pregnancy difficult to differentiate from an intrauterine pregnancy on ultrasound. The high mortality in this type of pregnancy is partially due to delay in diagnosis as well as the speed of hemorrhage.
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