Ectopic pregnancyFrom our partner site on breast cancer, MyBreastCancerNetwork.com. Ectopic pregnancy occurs when a fertilized egg implants in tissue outside of the uterus, and the placenta and fetus begin to develop there. The most common site is within a fallopian tube. However, ectopic pregnancies can rarely occur in the ovary, the abdomen, and in the lower portion of the uterus (the cervix). Alternative Names: Tubal pregnancy; Cervical pregnancy; Abdominal pregnancy Causes, incidence, and risk factors: advertisement Ectopic pregnancies are usually caused by conditions that obstruct or slow the passage of a fertilized ovum (egg) through the fallopian tube to the uterus. This may be caused by a physical blockage in the tube. Ectopic pregnancy may also be caused by failure of the zygote (the cell formed after the egg is fertilized) to move down the tube and into the uterus. Most cases are a result of scarring caused by previous tubal infection or tubal surgery. Up to 50% of women with ectopic pregnancies have a medical history of salpingitis or PID (pelvic inflammatory disease). Some ectopic pregnancies can be traced to congenital tubal abnormalities, endometriosis, tubal scarring and kinking caused by a ruptured appendix, or scarring caused by previous pelvic surgery and prior ectopic pregnancies. In a few cases, the cause is unknown. On occasion, a woman will become pregnant after elective tubal sterilization. The risk of an ectopic pregnancy occurring in this situation may reach 60%. Women who have had surgery to reverse previous tubal sterilization in order to become pregnant also have an increased risk of ectopic pregnancy when reversal is successful. The administration of hormones, specifically estrogen and progesterone, can slow the normal movement of the fertilized egg through the tubal epithelium and result in implantation in the tube. Women who become pregnant despite using progesterone-only oral contraceptives have a 5-fold increase in the ectopic pregnancy rate. Women who become pregnant despite using progesterone-bearing IUDs also have an increased risk of ectopic pregnancy. Ectopic pregnancy rates for those who become pregnant despite non-medicated IUD are 5%, while the rate for medicated IUD users who become pregnant despite the device is 15%. Note that these rates only refer to percents of the tiny proportion of women who become pregnant while using these methods -- they do not refer to women who have once used these methods and later become pregnant, or to the percent of women who become pregnant while using these methods. The "morning after pill" is associated with a 10-fold increase in risk of this condition when its use fails to prevent pregnancy. Ectopic pregnancies occur from 1 in every 40 to 1 in every 100 pregnancies. This rate increased four-fold between 1970 and 1992. Increased risk is associated with women who have a history of salpingitis or PID, tubal surgery of any type (including tubal ligation and its reversal), or prior ectopic pregnancy.
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