Online Guide to Healthy Living:
Incompetent Cervix
What is Incompetent Cervix(Cervical Incompetence)?
Cervical incompetence is a medical condition in which a pregnant woman's cervix begins to dilate (widen) and efface (thin) before
her pregnancy has reached term. Cervical incompetence may cause miscarriage or preterm birth during the second and third trimesters.
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In a woman with cervical incompetence, dilation and effacement of the cervix may occur without pain or uterine contractions.
In a normal pregnancy, dilation and effacement occurs in response to uterine contractions. Cervical incompetence occurs because
of weakness of the cervix, which is made to open by the growing pressure in the uterus as pregnancy progresses. If the responses
are not halted, rupture of the membranes and birth of a premature baby can result.
Miscarriage is the spontaneous end of a pregnancy at a stage where the embryo or fetus is incapable of surviving, generally defined
in humans at prior to 20 weeks of gestation. Miscarriage is the most common complication of early pregnancy.
Treatment
Cervical incompetence is not generally treated except when it appears to threaten a pregnancy. Cervical incompetence can be treated
using cervical cerclage, a surgical technique that reinforces the cervical muscle by placing sutures above the opening of the cervix
to narrow the cervical canal.
Cerclage procedures usually entail closing the cervix through the vagina with the aid of a speculum. Another approach involves
performing the cerclage through an abdominal incision. Transabdominal cerclage of the cervix makes it possible to place the stitch
exactly at the level that is needed. It can be carried out when the cervix is very short, effaced or totally distorted. The complications
described in the literature have been rare: hemorrhage from damage to the veins at the time of the procedure; and fetal death due to
uterine vessels occlusion.
Source: wikipedia.org
The information on this web site is for informational purposes only and is not intended to diagnos or treat any illness or health condition.
Always consult your physician about any health care issues you may have.