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Tubal pregnancy: significance of serum and peritoneal fluid alpha-amylase.

Hannon Zj,Guzick Ds-1985-09-01-PubMed
9

TL;DRAbstract

Thirty women with a histopathologically confirmed tubal ectopic pregnancy and 50 women with an intrauterine pregnancy of 12 weeks or less were studied. Serum alpha-amylase was found to be lower in women with a tubal pregnancy than in those with a normal pregnancy. Peritoneal fluid obtained by culdocentesis from women with a tubal pregnancy contained alpha-amylase concentrations that were consistently higher than the corresponding serum alpha-amylase concentrations, but not to a degree that it could be used as a reliable screening test.

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Thirty women with a histopathologically confirmed tubal ectopic pregnancy and 50 women with an intrauterine pregnancy of 12 weeks or less were studied. Serum alpha-amylase was found to be lower in women with a tubal pregnancy than in those with a normal pregnancy. Peritoneal fluid obtained by culdocentesis from women with a tubal pregnancy contained alpha-amylase concentrations that were consistently higher than the corresponding serum alpha-amylase concentrations, but not to a degree that it could be used as a reliable screening test.

Keywords

MedicineEctopic pregnancyPregnancyObstetricsGynecologyPeritoneal fluidFallopian tubeInternal medicine

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