PARTIAL MOLAR PREGNANCY

 

  1. Uterine signs.
  2. Ovarian signs.
  3. Placental signs.
  4. Fetus.

 

 

 

Growth restricted fetus

 

Enlarged placenta with cystic spaces

Partial Molar Pregnancy

Growth Retardation and Swiss Cheese Appearance Placenta

Partial Mole - Placental signs

Cystic spaces within placenta

 

  1. Doppler studies.

 

DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS

 

  1. Triploidy.
  2. Diploid / triploid mosaicism may appear as a triploid partial mole.
  3. Benign hydropic villous degeneration.
  4. Villous hydatidiform transformations have been demonstrated in association with tetraploidy, autosomal trisomy and monosomy X.
  5. Beckwith-Wiedermann syndrome - hydrops of the stem villi with placentomegaly and a normal trophoblast and phenotypically normal fetus has been reported. This appears to be a limited malformation of the extraembryonic mesoderm involving the mesenchyme and vessels of the stem villi of central cotyledons and is therefore referred to as mesenchymal dysplasia.
  6. Normal pregnancy adjacent to a leiomyoma.