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Vessels ligation have been used as a part of conservative management in treatment of placenta accrete spectrum to decrease blood loss as uterine artery ligation and internal iliac artery ligation. Surgical ligation of the anterior divisions of the internal iliac artery is practiced by many tertiary care centers during management of women with PAS disorders. However there is no recommendation toward the routine use of internal iliac artery ligation before bladder dissection during conservative management of (placenta accrete spectrum). The retroperitoneal space will be dissected and bifurcation of common iliac vessels will be identified, After identifying the ureter, the internal iliac artery will be dissected on both sides away from surrounding tissues and from adjacent iliac vein. The anterior branch of each internal iliac artery will be then prophylactically ligated using suture ligation approximately 2-3 cm distal to common iliac artery bifurcation in order to avoid ligation of the posterior division. Principal investigators will conduct a study to evaluate the efficacy of internal iliac artery ligation before bladder dissection during conservative management using cervico isthmic compression suture in cases of Placenta accrete spectrum.
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Surgical technique for all participants will be (Cervico isthmic compression suture)
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Inclusion criteria
Pregnant female age between 18_35 years.
History of ' 3 caesarean deliveries or less .
Pregnant female diagnosed to have none complicated medical disorders e.g. Uncontrolled hypertension, Uncontrolled preeclampsia, Uncontrolled Diabetes mellitus .
If ≥2 of the following criteria present by trans abdominal ultrasound and color Doppler examination:
a-Loss of clear zone c-Placental lacunae. e-Placental bulge. g-Utero-vesical. hyper vascularity. i-Bridging vessels. b-Myometrial thinning. d-Bladder wall interruption. f-Focal exophytic mass. h-Subplacental.hyper vascularity. j-Lacunae feeder vessels.
Placenta increta or percreta according to FIGO classification (2019)including:
Grade II(FIGO 2019 ) 8:Abnormally invasive placenta (Increta)
Clinical criteria):
At laparotomy Abnormal macroscopic findings over the placental bed: bluish/purple coloring, distension (placental "bulge").
Significant amounts of hyper vascularity (dense tangled bed of vessels or multiple vessels running parallel craniocaudally in the uterine serosa).
No placental tissue seen to be invading through the uterine serosa. Gentle cord traction results in the uterus being pulled inwards without separation of the placenta (so-called the dimple sign).
Histologic criteria:
Hysterectomy specimen or partial myometrial resection of the increta area shows placental villi within the muscular fibers and sometimes in the lumen of the deep uterine vasculature (radial or arcuate arteries),if failed conservative therapy.
No invasion into any other organ, including the posterior wall of the bladder (a clear surgical plan can be identified between bladder and uterus).
Histologic criteria Hysterectomy specimen showing villous tissue within or breaching the uterine serosa.
Exclusion criteria
Abnormally adherent placenta (placenta adherenta or accreta) Clinical criteria Macroscopically, the uterus shows no obvious distension over the placental bed (placental "bulge"), no placental tissue is seen invading through the surface of the uterus, and there is no or minimal neovascularity Histologic criteria Microscopic examination of the placental bed samples from hysterectomy specimen shows extended areas of absent decidua between villous tissue and myometrium with placental villi attached directly to the superficial myometrium The diagnosis cannot be made on just delivered placental tissue nor on random biopsies of the placental bed.
Grade 3c: With invasion of other pelvic tissue/organ Clinical criteria At laparotomy Placental villi are seen to be invading into the broad ligament, vaginal wall, pelvic sidewall or any other pelvic organ (with or without invasion of the bladder).
Histologic criteria Hysterectomy specimen showing villous tissue breaching the uterine serosa and invading pelvic tissues/organs (with or without invasion of the bladder) For the purposes of this classification, "uterus" includes the uterine body and uterine cervix.
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42 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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