What is the treatment of this condition?
The treatment depends on how clear it is, how big the fetus is, and what methods can be done. If your pregnancy is clearly out of the womb and your fetus is still relatively small, you may be prescribed methotrexate. This drug is injected into the muscle and flows through the bloodstream to the fetus and terminates the growth of the placenta to the pregnancy. Over time, a very small embryo re-absorbs the body. When the medicine starts to affect, you may experience a degree of sting, abdominal pain and possibly nausea, vomiting and diarrhea. You should avoid taking alcohol, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs such as ibuprofen, spirin, naproxen and any multivitamin or supplements containing folic acid. You should also avoid sexual activity, intense activity and sunlight.
You should then have a blood test to check the amount of human hormone gonadotrophin in the blood, and to ensure that the pregnancy is completely removed and removed from the uterus. These tests continue until the amount of this hormone reaches zero, which usually lasts a few weeks. During this process, you experienced any signs of rupture (such as severe abdominal pain, shoulder pain or severe bleeding) or shock symptoms (such as weakness, increased heart rate, drowsiness, moisture and skin moisture). Immediately call an emergency get. If you are late for methotrexate (pregnancy has progressed a lot), you have severe pain or internal bleeding, or you are breastfeeding, or if you have special health problems that you do not use, then you should have surgery. If your bleeding is intense, you may need to have blood.
If you are in a stable condition and the fetus is small, it can be removed through laparoscopic surgery. The expert examines your tubes with a very small camera that has entered your body through a small cavity in your navel, and can often remove the fetus or tissue and keep the pipes intact, but if the damage to the tube is infected or bleeding You may need to remove the tube too much. Laparoscopic surgery requires general anesthetic, special equipment and experienced surgeon, and you need about a week to heal.
As with the drug treatment, you should have a blood test kit after surgery to ensure that the amount of your hormone in pregnancy is monitored and monitored to ensure that you are completely removed from the womb. Again, this test continues until the hormone levels reach zero, which usually lasts a few weeks. In some cases (for example, if there is a widespread abdominal tissue in your abdomen with severe bleeding or a very large embryo), Laparoscopic technology may not be the right treatment option for you. In these cases you should have large abdominal surgery. In this condition, you will be given general anesthesia and the gynecologist will open your abdomen and remove the fetus. Like in Laparoscopic Surgery, in this way, your tube may be retained or removed due to extensive damage or bleeding. It takes about six weeks to recover. You may experience bloating and abdominal pain or discomfort when healing.
If your blood Rh is negative, after treating an uterus pregnant, you need a Rh immune globulin unless your baby's father has a Rh negative.