In 10 to 15 % of cases, hydatidiform moles may develop into invasive moles.
12.
There are two subtypes of hydatidiform mole : complete hydatidiform mole, and partial hydatidiform mole.
13.
There are two subtypes of hydatidiform mole : complete hydatidiform mole, and partial hydatidiform mole.
14.
There are two subtypes of hydatidiform mole : complete hydatidiform mole, and partial hydatidiform mole.
15.
In rare cases a hydatidiform mole co-exists in the uterus with a normal, viable fetus.
16.
The following April after reuniting with her husband, she became pregnant, only to miscarry the hydatidiform mole.
17.
The best known of these is the Gestational Trophoblastic Disease ( see Choriocarcinoma and Hydatidiform mole ), detected by trophoblastic screening.
18.
Complete hydatidiform moles have 2.5 % risk of developing into choriocarcinoma, but also a 10 % chance of becoming an invasive mole.
19.
New medical data suggest that a significantly shorter waiting period after the hCG levels become normal is reasonable for approximately 97 % of the patients with hydatidiform mole.
20.
This is known now as a hydatidiform mole, a condition occurring most often in women over 45, resulting from one or two sperm cells fertilising a blighted egg.