How to treat invasive molar pregnancy

  I believe most women are not unfamiliar with molar pregnancy. molar pregnancy is an abnormal pregnancy, and invasive molar pregnancy, also known as invasive molar pregnancy, is one of the types of molar pregnancy. Due to the invasion of molar tissue into the uterine muscle layer or the occurrence of malignant nourishing cell tumors outside the uterus, how to treat invasive molar pregnancy?

  

How to treat invasive molar pregnancy1

  Invasive molar pregnancy usually comes from benign molar pregnancy and often occurs within six months (i.e. six months) after the surgical removal of the molar pregnancy. Women may show symptoms such as irregular vaginal bleeding or combined extrauterine metastases. When they go to the hospital for blood HCG testing, the results will show that the female's blood HCG level continues to rise.

  The treatment of invasive molar pregnancy mainly adopts a comprehensive approach of chemotherapy and surgery. Chemotherapy treatment needs to be continued until symptoms or signs completely disappear. During the treatment period, blood HCG measurement can be done once a week at the hospital. Generally, three consecutive results are within the normal range, and only two to three additional consolidation treatments are needed.

  With the continuous advancement of current medical chemotherapy methods, the treatment prognosis for invasive molar pregnancy is relatively good, with a cure rate of over 90% and an extremely low mortality rate. After treatment, invasive molar pregnancy should be followed up for at least two years, during which measures must be taken to avoid unintended pregnancy. Generally, it is considered cured if there is no recurrence for five years.

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