Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
Isthmocele is a growing concern as a cause of abnormal uterine bleeding, especially post menstrual bleeding which may be present in up to 82% of these cases (Iannone et al 2019).
our trial is a randomized clinical trial in which women will be randomly allocated to either medical treatment by oral contraceptive or to medical treatment by misotac.
Full description
Isthmocele is a growing concern as a cause of abnormal uterine bleeding, especially post menstrual bleeding which may be present in up to 82% of these cases There is no universal standard definition of isthmocele but most of the authors agree that isthmocele as a myometrial discontinuity in the myometrium of the anterior uterine wall of >2mm at the site of a cesarean scar in non-pregnant women.
Treatment should be offered only to the symptomatic patient. Surgery, by hysteroscopy, laparoscopy, laparotomy, or vaginal routes, is the most common treatment of choice even in the small defect Surgery is not without complications and many women reject it as a treatment option so it is reasonable to look for medical methods of management.
The pathogenesis of AUB following the development of isthmocele remains unexplained. Oral contraceptive pills might represent a valid option due to a regulatory effect on the endometrium. Several authors describe the effectiveness of oral contraceptives in reducing bleeding disorders correlated to isthmocele.
Another theory of AUB following the development of isthmocele is that menstrual blood can be collected in the defect so that it seeps slowly over the days following menstruation. This mechanism is added by impaired uterine contractility at the scar area.
Misoprostol is a synthetic analog of prostaglandin E1, which increases myometrial contractions so it can be used for various other indications in obstetrics and gynecology the aim is to examine two different methods of medical treatment in cases of symptomatic isthmocele; first regulatory effect on the endometrium (Oral contraceptive pills) and second contraction of myometrium (misotac)
Patient and methods:
Women with a previous cesarean section who presented with postmenstrual spotting, and in whom sonohysterography had shown a isthmocele were eligible. A isthmocele was defined as an indentation in the anterior uterine wall at the site of the caesarean scar with at least 2 mm depth, measured during sonohysterography.
Postmenstrual spotting needed to be present for at least three consecutive months after the last cesarean section. Postmenstrual spotting was defined as two or more days of brownish discharge at the end of menstrual bleeding when the total period of menstrual bleeding exceeds 7 days
Exclusion criteria included any organic condition that will be the cause of that bleeding; Pregnancy, (suspected) malignancies, use of any hormonal contraceptives, fibroid, infection in the genital tract, etc.
Randomization After written informed consent was given, women were randomly allocated to either medical treatment by oral contraceptive or to medical treatment by misotac.
Enrollment
Sex
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
50 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal