# Ovarian Ectopic Pregnancy: A Case Report of Two Cases Highlighting Diagnostic and Management Challenges

**Authors:** Pradnya More, Megha Mishra, Sahar Mohamed

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.92159 · 2025-09-12

## TL;DR

This paper reports two rare cases of ovarian ectopic pregnancy, highlighting the challenges in diagnosis and the importance of early surgical intervention.

## Contribution

The paper contributes two distinct clinical case reports that emphasize diagnostic challenges and the role of laparoscopy in managing ovarian ectopic pregnancies.

## Key findings

- Ovarian ectopic pregnancy can present with nonspecific symptoms like acute pelvic pain and hemoperitoneum.
- Laparoscopy is crucial for both diagnosing and treating ovarian ectopic pregnancies when imaging is inconclusive.
- Early surgical intervention helps reduce complications and preserve ovarian function.

## Abstract

Ovarian ectopic pregnancy (OEP) is a rare but potentially life-threatening form of ectopic gestation. Although recognized as a distinct clinical entity, its pathophysiology, diagnosis, and management remain poorly defined. Clinical presentation is often nonspecific and may mimic acute pelvic pathologies such as ruptured corpus luteum, hemorrhagic ovarian cysts, or miscarriage in women presenting with vaginal bleeding. In some cases, it resembles a pregnancy of unknown location (PUL) when the gestation cannot be localized on imaging, complicating preoperative diagnosis. Prompt recognition is critical to avoid severe hemorrhagic complications, and laparoscopy remains the mainstay of both diagnosis and treatment.

We describe two cases with distinct clinical presentations: one involving a 34-year-old multiparous woman presenting with acute pelvic pain, vaginal bleeding, hemoperitoneum, and a hemorrhagic right ovarian lesion confirmed histologically as OEP, and another a 17-year-old nulliparous woman initially managed as a PUL who later presented with syncope, nausea, and vomiting, where laparoscopy revealed a bleeding ovarian mass, which is also confirmed histologically as OEP.

OEP should be considered in reproductive-aged women presenting with acute abdominal pain, hemoperitoneum, and elevated beta human chorionic gonadotropin, even when ultrasound findings are inconclusive. These cases emphasize the need for a high index of suspicion and the role of laparoscopy in diagnosis and management. Early surgical intervention reduces morbidity and preserves ovarian function. Given its rarity and the absence of standardized guidelines, appropriate counseling is essential, and larger datasets are needed to inform future diagnostic and management protocols.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** ovarian ectopic pregnancy (MONDO:0044098)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** nausea (MESH:D009325), ectopic gestation (MESH:D016640), hemorrhagic ovarian cysts (MESH:D010048), vaginal bleeding (MESH:D014592), bleeding ovarian mass (MESH:D010049), syncope (MESH:D013575), abdominal pain (MESH:D015746), vomiting (MESH:D014839), OEP (MESH:D065172), hemoperitoneum (MESH:D006465), hemorrhagic (MESH:D006470), pelvic pain (MESH:D017699), pregnancy (MESH:D011254), miscarriage (MESH:D000022)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12515490/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12515490