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  2. Uterine inversion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uterine_inversion

    After the uterus is replaced oxytocin and antibiotics are typically recommended. [1] The placenta can then be removed if it is still attached. [1] Uterine inversion occurs in about 1 in 2,000 to 1 in 10,000 deliveries. [1] [4] Rates are higher in the developing world. [1]

  3. What is an inverted uterus? - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/inverted-uterus-know-one...

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  4. Uterine incarceration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uterine_incarceration

    Also, the uterus may develop a uterine sacculation, that is a part of its back wall softens like an aneurysm and allows expansion of the fetus into the abdomen with a risk of uterine rupture. [3] Further, urinary complications may develop such as cystitis , and bladder distention could eventually lead to rupture of the bladder .

  5. Subinvolution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subinvolution

    The uterine height is greater than the normal for the particular day of puerperium. Normal puerperal uterus may be displaced by a full bladder or a loaded rectum. It feels boggy and softer upon palpation. The presence of features responsible for subinvolution may be evident.

  6. Retroverted uterus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Retroverted_uterus

    A retroverted uterus (tilted uterus, tipped uterus) is a uterus that is oriented posteriorly, towards the rectum in the back of the body. This is in contrast to the typical uterus, which is oriented forward (slightly " anteverted ") toward the bladder , with the anterior part slightly concave.

  7. Here's What Really Happens During Your Menstrual Cycle - AOL

    www.aol.com/heres-really-happens-during...

    “It’s like a universal, coordinated, full-uterine event. The reason I say that is you need a lot of complicated systems to work all together to produce that. ... This variation occurs because ...

  8. Vesicouterine fistula - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vesicouterine_fistula

    Vesicouterine fistulas occur most commonly after lower segment caesarean sections (about 83-93% of cases). [2] The possible mechanisms by which vesicouterine fistulas occur following caesarean sections include undetected bladder injury during caesarean section, inadvertent placement of a suture through the bladder during the repair of the uterus and abnormal blood vessel connections following ...

  9. Placenta accreta spectrum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Placenta_accreta_spectrum

    Occurs when the placenta penetrates the myometrium. Placenta percreta 5–7% The highest-risk form of the condition occurs when the placenta penetrates the entire myometrium to the uterine serosa (invades through entire uterine wall). This variant can lead to the placenta attaching to other organs such as the rectum or urinary bladder.