Abstract
This is report regarding a 28-year-old woman who conceived and delivered a healthy child following treatment for brain metastasis of choriocarcinoma in 1980 and a prolonged postoperative disease-free period. The patient had delivered a hydatidiform mole. Eight months afterwards she was admitted to our hospital with occipital pain, vomiting and stupor, and upon CT examination was found to have a brain tumor. The surgically removed tumor was pathologically diagnosed as choriocarcinoma. Postoperative methotrexate chemotherapy rapidly lowered the preoperative urinary human chorionic gonadotrophin (19 IU/ml), and allowed restoration of the preoperative LH level, consciousness, ambulation, and manifest ovulation. Occasional mild cramps were received by continuous use of anticonvulsants which did not affect her daily life. Four and one-half years postoperatively she conceived, and had a healthy boy weighing 2,294 g at the 39th week of gestation in June 1985. Both mother and baby have been doing well for 7 postpartum years.
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More From: Asia-Oceania Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology
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