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Publication
Featured researches published by Cecilia Fabres.
Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine | 2003
Cecilia Fabres; Guillermo Aviles; Carlos De La Jara; Juan Escalona; Jorge Felipe Muñoz; Antonio MacKenna; Carlos Fernandez; Fernando Zegers-Hochschild; Emilio Fernández
Objective. We sought (1) to describe an anatomic defect of the uterine cavity in the anterior isthmus diagnosed by transvaginal sonography in a group of premenopausal women with previous cesarean deliveries, (2) to establish whether there is an association between the presence of the pouch and a bleeding disturbance, and (3) to compare the diagnostic efficacy of transvaginal sonography versus hysteroscopy for the detection of this defect. Methods. We performed a retrospective study of 92 premenopausal women with histories of at least 1 cesarean delivery. Age, number of previous cesarean deliveries, time elapsed between last cesarean delivery and first consultation, and total area of the pouch were recorded in groups of women with and without abnormal bleeding. Hysteroscopy was also performed in 43.8% of the patients who had abnormal bleeding. Results. In all women, transvaginal sonography revealed the presence of a pouch on the anterior uterine segment at the site of the expected previous cesarean delivery scar. Hysteroscopy showed 100% correlation with transvaginal sonography in detection of this pouch. Conclusions. The high correlation between bleeding disturbances and the presence of a pouch, in the absence of other pathologic entities, suggests this anatomic defect as the possible cause, especially in view of the fact that women who had heavier and longer bleeding episodes tended to have a larger pouch. Transvaginal sonography is a very simple, noninvasive, low‐cost examination that should be considered as the first choice for screening, because it highly correlates (100%) with hysteroscopy in the diagnosis of this defect and may help rule out other causes.
Journal of The American Association of Gynecologic Laparoscopists | 1996
Cecilia Fabres; Veronica Alam; Jose P. Balmaceda; Fernando Zegers-Hochschild; Antonio MacKenna; Emilio Fernández
Transvaginal ultrasound is a noninvasive diagnostic technique that remains to be proved as accurate as hysteroscopy in the diagnosis of benign intrauterine lesions. We compared its efficacy with that of hysteroscopy in the diagnosis of benign intrauterine pathology in 126 infertile women in whom the diagnosis was confirmed by histologic studies. The women had a complete evaluation with preoperative transvaginal ultrasound, hysteroscopy, and histologic analysis of uterine cavity specimens. Sensivity, specificity, and predictive values were calculated for ultrasound and hysteroscopy considering the histologic study as 100%. Sensivity was 95% and 100%, and specificity 97.4% and 93.7% for transvaginal ultrasound and hysteroscopy, respectively. The positive predictive value for benign intrauterine lesions was 100% for ultrasound and 89.8% for hysteroscopy. The most frequent intrauterine lesions found were polyps and myomas. Transvaginal ultrasound is a valuable method of diagnosing benign intrauterine lesions in infertile women, and is especially important as a noninvasive technique to plan hysteroscopic surgery.
Prenatal Diagnosis | 2000
Santiago Munné; Soledad Sepulveda; Jose P. Balmaceda; Emilio Fernández; Cecilia Fabres; Antonio MacKenna; Teresa López; Javier Crosby; Fernando Zegers-Hochschild
So far, all preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) protocols in use produce results after the eggs have been fertilized. However, these approaches are not acceptable for patients with moral objections to the generation and discard of supernumerary zygotes or embryos. In these circumstances, only those oocytes to be replaced may be inseminated. The purpose of this study was to develop a PGD protocol to diagnose first polar bodies (PBs) prior to Intracytoplasmatic Sperm Injection (ICSI) in order to inseminate only those oocytes found to be chromosomally normal. PB biopsy was performed 1 hour after ovum pick up, and after fixation, the PBs were analysed by FISH and the eggs inseminated by ICSI no later than 7 hours after retrieval. One third (33.3%) of the PBs were aneuploid. Fifty‐four normal and 12 non‐resolved oocytes were injected by ICSI, of which 65% became 2‐PN zygotes. Embryo transfer on day 2 was possible in all 10 patients (average maternal age 35.2±3.2, range 29–39 years), of which 6 became pregnant with 8 fetuses (28.6% or 8/28 transferred embryos). The results indicate that PB analysis of some common chromosome abnormalities is feasible within time limits imposed by ICSI insemination (6 hours or less). Copyright
Journal of The American Association of Gynecologic Laparoscopists | 1996
Emilio Fernández; C Fernández; Cecilia Fabres; Veronica Alam
Abnormal postmenstrual uterine bleeding may occur in women with history of cesarean section. To study the etiology of this anomaly, transvaginal ultrasound (TVU) was performed during follicular phase in 20 such patients, and hysteroscopy in 7. The TVU revealed the presence of fluid in the isthmus in relation to the cesarean section scar, where a kind of pouch or bursa was observed. Cervical introduction of a catheter showed that the fluid was blood. The TVU observation was confirmed in women in whom hysteroscopy was performed. Resection of ring-shaped fibrotic tissue on the inferior part of the scar stopped abnormal bleeding. Four women were infertile and two conceived, probably because stopping postmenstrual bleeding could interfere with the quality of cervical mucus. These findings suggest that abnormal uterine bleeding in women with an abnormal uterine scar could be resolved by minimally invasive endoscopic surgery, and TVU is a valuable diagnostic tool.
JBRA assisted reproduction | 2014
Cecilia Fabres; Alfredo M. Germain; Lorena Quiroz; Javier Crosby
Report of clinical treatment of a patient with a triple pregnancy after ICSI, who had the abortion of the first fetus at 16 weeks of gestation and the “asynchronic delivery” of the other two, at 28 weeks. A reproductive inflammato ry process previously diagnosed in the couple could have been related with the premature rupture of membranes (PROM) occurred at 15.5 weeks of pregnancy. The clinical interventions described, made possible the delayed delivery and the survival of the other two triplets. This case shows us the importance to transfer no more than two embryos during ART, to avoid the catastrophic consequences of a triple pregnancy.
Journal of Minimally Invasive Gynecology | 2002
Cecilia Fabres; Pablo Arriagada; Carlos Hernández Fernández; Antonio MacKenna; Fernando Zegers; Emilio Fernández
Human Reproduction | 1995
Fernando Zegers-Hochschild; E.O. Fernandez; Antonio MacKenna; Cecilia Fabres; E. Altieri; T.H. Lopez
Human Reproduction | 1994
Fernando Zegers-Hochschild; E. Altieri; Cecilia Fabres; E.O. Fernandez; Antonio MacKenna; P. Orihuela
Human Reproduction | 2000
Fernando Zegers-Hochschild; Jose P. Balmaceda; Cecilia Fabres; Veronica Alam; Antonio MacKenna; E. Fernández; I.M. Pacheco; M.S. Sepúlveda; S. Chen; C. Borrero; E. Borges
Human Reproduction | 2000
Antonio MacKenna; Cecilia Fabres; Veronica Alam; Verónica Morales