hydatidiform$36366$ - translation to german
Diclib.com
ChatGPT AI Dictionary
Enter a word or phrase in any language 👆
Language:

Translation and analysis of words by ChatGPT artificial intelligence

On this page you can get a detailed analysis of a word or phrase, produced by the best artificial intelligence technology to date:

  • how the word is used
  • frequency of use
  • it is used more often in oral or written speech
  • word translation options
  • usage examples (several phrases with translation)
  • etymology

hydatidiform$36366$ - translation to german

HUMAN DISEASE
Hydatiform mola; Mola hydatiforma; Hydatidiform; Hydatidiform Mole; Hydatiform mole; Molar pregnancies; Hydatid mole; Mola hydatidosa; Mole pregnancy; Complete mole; Mola hytadidosa; Partial hydatidiform mole; Partial mole; Complete hydatidiform mole; Vesicular mole; Hydatidiform mole
  • Hydatidiform mole on CT, axial view
  • Hydatidiform mole on CT, sagittal view
  • Uterus with complete hydatidiform mole
  • [[Transvaginal ultrasonography]] showing a molar pregnancy
  • Molar pregnancy in ultrasound
  • Vesicular mole

hydatidiform      
adj. blasig (med.)

Definition

hydatidiform mole
[?h??d?'t?d?f?:m]
¦ noun Medicine a cluster of fluid-filled sacs formed in the womb by the degeneration of chorionic tissue around an aborting embryo.

Wikipedia

Molar pregnancy

A molar pregnancy also known as a hydatidiform mole, is an abnormal form of pregnancy in which a non-viable fertilized egg implants in the uterus. A molar pregnancy is a type of gestational trophoblastic disease that used to be known as a hydatidiform mole. A molar pregnancy grows into a mass in the uterus that has swollen chorionic villi that grow in clusters resembling grapes. A molar pregnancy can develop when a fertilized egg does not contain an original maternal nucleus. The products of conception may or may not contain fetal tissue. Molar pregnancies are categorized as partial moles or complete moles, with the word 'mole' being used to denote simply a clump of growing tissue, or a 'growth'.

A complete mole is caused by a single sperm (90% of the time) or two (10% of the time) sperm combining with an egg which has lost its DNA. In the first case, the sperm then reduplicates, forming a "complete" 46 chromosome set. The genotype is typically 46,XX (diploid) due to the subsequent mitosis of the fertilizing sperm but can also be 46,XY (diploid). 46,YY (diploid) is not observed. In contrast, a partial mole occurs when a normal egg is fertilized by one or two sperm which then reduplicates itself, yielding the genotypes of 69,XXY (triploid) or 92,XXXY (tetraploid).

Complete moles have a 2–4% risk of developing into choriocarcinoma in Western countries and 10–15% in Eastern countries and a 15% risk of becoming an invasive mole. Incomplete moles can become invasive (<5% risk) but are not associated with choriocarcinoma. Complete hydatidiform moles account for 50% of all cases of choriocarcinoma.

Molar pregnancies are a relatively rare complication of pregnancy, making up 1 in 1,000 pregnancies in the US, with much higher rates in Asia (e.g. up to 1 in 100 pregnancies in Indonesia).