Peer Reviewed
1
DOI
10.17077/2154-4751.1230
Abstract
Endometrial polyps are most commonly seen in the postmenopausal women with uterine bleeding, although the giant polyps which originate from the uterine cavity and protruding from the cervical os are rare. Several cases which have been described in the literature are usually developed secondary to tamoxifen use, and the polyps do not extend or protrude from the external cervical os. Most of the polyps protruded from the cervical os can mimic a cervical neoplasia or endocervical polyp. We report the case of a giant endometrial polyp (8x4x3 cm in size) which was protruding from the external cervical os and that developed spontaneously without tamoxifen use in a multiparous 73 -year-old woman presenting with vaginal bleeding. Hysteroscopic polypectomy was performed and no recurrence was seen at 6 months after surgery. Diagnosis, management and outcome of this rare entity have been discussed according to the literature.
Keywords
Giant endometrial polyps, hysteroscopic polyp excision, hysteroscopic surgical procedures, MRI
Total Pages
9 pages
Financial Disclosure
The authors report no conflict of interest.
Rights
Copyright © Ahmet Said Cil, Murat Bozkurt, Duyga Kara, Beril Guler, 2013.
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.
Recommended Citation
Çil AS, Bozkurt M, Kara D, Guler B. Giant endometrial polyp protruding from the external cervical os in a postmenopausal woman: magnetic resonance imaging and hysteroscopic findings. Proc Obstet Gynecol. 2013 Dec 31;3(3):Article 2 [9 p.]. https://doi.org/10.17077/2154-4751.1230. Free full text article.