Lithopedion

A lithopedion – also spelled lithopaedion or lithopædion – (Ancient Greek: λίθος = stone; Ancient Greek: παιδίον = small child, infant), or stone baby, is a rare phenomenon which occurs most commonly when a fetus dies during an abdominal pregnancy,[1] is too large to be reabsorbed by the body, and calcifies on the outside as part of a foreign body reaction, shielding the mother's body from the dead tissue of the fetus and preventing infection.

A lithopedion. This highly unusual specimen remained in the abdomen of a woman for 55 years. During this time the mother had five additional uncomplicated pregnancies.

Lithopedia may occur from 14 weeks gestation to full term. It is not unusual for a stone baby to remain undiagnosed for decades and to be found well after natural menopause; diagnosis often happens when the patient is examined for other conditions that require being subjected to a X-ray study. A review of 128 cases by T.S.P. Tien found that the mean age of women with lithopedia was fifty-five years at the time of diagnosis, with the oldest being one-hundred years old. The lithopedion was carried for an average of twenty-two years, and in several cases, the women became pregnant a second time and gave birth to children without incident. Nine of the reviewed cases had carried lithopedia for over fifty years before diagnosis.[2]

According to one report there are only 300 known cases of lithopedia in the world,[3] recorded in over 400 years of medical literature. While the chance of abdominal pregnancy is one in 11,000 pregnancies, only between 1.5 and 1.8% of these abdominal pregnancies may develop into lithopedia.[4]

History

A CT scan showing an extra-uterine calcified foetal skeleton, a lithopedion

The earliest known lithopedion was found in an archaeological excavation at Bering Sinkhole, on the Edwards Plateau in Kerr County, Texas, and dated to 1100 BC.[5] Another early example was found in a Gallo-Roman archaeological site in Costebelle, southern France, dating to the 4th century.[6]

The condition was first described in a treatise by the Spanish Muslim physician Abū al-Qāsim (Abulcasis) in the 10th century.[5] By the mid-18th century, a number of cases had been documented in humans, sheep and hares in France and Germany. In a speech before the French Académie Royale des Sciences in 1748, surgeon Sauveur François Morand used lithopedia both as evidence of the common nature of fetal development in viviparous and oviparous animals, and as an argument in favor of cesarean section.[7]

In 1880, German physician Friedrich Küchenmeister reviewed 47 cases of lithopedia from the medical literature and distinguished three subgroups: Lithokelyphos ("Stone Sheath"), where calcification occurs on the placental membrane and not the fetus; Lithotecnon ("Stone Child") or "true" lithopedion, where the fetus itself is calcified after entering the abdominal cavity, following the rupture of the placental and ovarian membranes; and Lithokelyphopedion ("Stone Sheath [and] Child"), where both fetus and sac are calcified. Lithopedia can originate both as tubal and ovarian pregnancies, although tubal pregnancy cases are more common.[2]

Reported cases

Before 1900

Patient
(age at time of diagnosis)
Location Date of pregnancy Date of diagnosis
(case duration)
Additional information
Unknown Cordoba, II Umayyad Caliphate Unknown Late 10th century The case referred by Abulcasis. The patient was pregnant in two separate occasions but never gave birth. "A long time" after, she developed a large swelling in the navel area, that turned into a suppurating wound and would not heal despite receiving treatment. This continued until Abulcasis removed several fetal bones through the wound, which initially shocked Abulcasis, as he had never known of a similar case. The patient largely recovered her health, but she continued to suppurate through the wound.[8]
Lodovia "LaCavalla" Pomponischi, Duchy of Mantua Unknown 1540 The patient had a failed pregnancy followed by a successful one, after which she fell sick and rapidly lost weight. Christopher Bain, a travelling surgeon, practised an incision and extracted "the skeleton of a male child". She recovered fully and went on to have four more children.[8]
Colombe Chatri (68)* Sens,  Kingdom of France 1554 1582
(28 years)
Chatri became pregnant for the first time at 40, but never gave birth after breaking her water and going through labor pains. She was bedridden for the next three years, during which she could notice a hard tumor on her lower abdomen, and complained of tiredness and abdominal pains for the rest of her life. After her death, her widower requested two physicians to examine her body, who discovered a fully formed, petrified baby girl, with remains of hair and a single tooth.[2] By 1653 the lithopedion had come into the possession of King Frederick III of Denmark, who consented to show it to Thomas Bartholin, but not to examine it further.[7]
Unknown Pont-à-Mousson, Lorraine,  Holy Roman Empire 1629 1659
(30 years)
[7][9]
Unknown Dôle, Franche-Comté,  Spanish Empire 1645 1661
(16 years)
[7][9]
Marguerite Mathieu (62)* Toulouse,  Kingdom of France 1653 1678
(25 years)
Originally from the Gascon village of Viulas near Lombez, Mathieu gave birth to ten children but only three survived infancy. At 37, she became pregnant, carried to full term and broke her water for the eleventh time, but she never gave birth despite the efforts of a physician. She suffered from acute abdominal pain for two months and vaginal bleeding for five, and felt discomfort for the rest of her life. She could only ease this when she lied over her back, which made her bedridden in practice, and experience periodic paroxysmal attacks. Her case became notorious and her symptoms were popularly attributed to a spell cast by a sorceress whom Mathieu had rejected as a midwife. She consented to be the subject of a public, three-day long necropsy after her death, which was attended by four doctors, three surgeons and their assistants. They found the calcified umbilical cord, placenta and a fully formed baby boy inside that weighed 3,916 grams. The lithopedion was found floating in white, odorless pus, which made it semi-mobile and would explain Mathieu's claim that she could still feel the baby moving inside her. The lithopedion was extensively described and pictured in a published memoir by François Boyle, one of the doctors present.[7]
Unknown Leeuwarden,  United Provinces c. 1692 1694
(21 months)
A 21-month old, intra-tubarian lithopedion was removed successfully from a living woman by Cyprien, a teacher of anatomy and surgery at the University of Franeker.[7]
Anna Mullern (94)* Leinzell, Swabia,  Holy Roman Empire 1674 1720
(46 years)
Aged 48, Mullern became pregnant, broke her water and went through labor pains for seven weeks without giving birth, retaining a swollen belly afterwards. She would suffer pain when exercising for the rest of her life, but she was able to become pregnant again and gave birth to healthy dizygotic twins. Convinced that she had been pregnant and carried the previous baby with her still, Mullern made the local physician and surgeon swear that they would open her body after her death. The physician did not survive her, but the elderly surgeon fulfilled his promise with the help of his son, finding "a hard mass of the form and size of a large Ninepin-Bowl" that contained a petrified fetus inside. It was examined by George I of Britain's personal physician Johann Georg Steigerthal, who wrote an account of it.[10]
Marie de Bresse (61)* Joigny,  Kingdom of France 1716 1747
(31 years)
Patient in her second pregnancy after a natural abortion four years before. De Bresse took it to full term and underwent labor pains for two days, but never had vaginal dilatation. After the midwife gave up, an assembly of doctors and physicians from Troyes decided unanimously that the best was to perform a cesarean section, but she refused. She continued having abdominal pains for a month and could not resume work before eight. She never regained her period and continued lactating for thirty years. At 61, she was hospitalized for chest inflammation and died shortly after. The autopsy found an oval mass the size of a man's head embedded in her right fallopian tube, which weighted eight pounds and contained a fully formed baby boy with hair, two incisors and remains of amniotic fluid. The envelope was not fully calcified.[11]
Mrs. Ball London,  Kingdom of Great Britain 1741 1747
(6 years)
"A dead infant" was found in the belly, outside of the womb, during an autopsy performed at the request of the patient. In the time between her failed pregnancy and her own death, Ball became pregnant and gave birth four times without complications.[11]
Randi Jonsdatter (50) Kvikne, Hedmark, Denmark-Norway 1803 1813
(10 years)
Patient "gave birth" to a petrified baby divided in two parts, through a cut performed over Jonsdatter's belly button. She lived for many years after without problem.[12]
Rebecca Eddy (77)* Frankfort, New York,  USA c.1802 1852
(c.50 years)
Aged 27 and in her first pregnancy, Eddy went through what seemed to be labor pains after an accident with a large kettle over the fire, but the pains disappeared a few days later and she never gave birth. William H. H. Parkhurst examined her in 1842, noting the "largeness, hardness and irregularity" of her abdominal lump; he would perform her autopsy in front of 20 witnesses when she died a decade later. During the process Parkhurst found "a perfect formed child... weighing 6 pounds avoirdupois (2.7 kilograms)" who "had no adhesions or connections with the mother except to the Fallopian tubes, and the blood vessels which nourished it, and which were given off from the mesenteric arteries... the child was almost floating in the abdomen."[13]
Sophia Magdalena Lehmann (87)* Zittau,  German Empire 1823 1880
(57 years)
Lehmann, a widow from Olbersdorf, was diagnosed with lithopedion in 1823 by an obstetrician in Zittau, and treated by Küchenmeister before he moved to Dresden in 1859. Upon her death, Küchenmeister performed her autopsy and used her case to describe the lythokeliphos category.[7]
* After death of the patient.

After 1900

Patient
(age at time of diagnosis)
Location Date of pregnancy Date of diagnosis
(case duration)
Additional information
Unknown Yazoo City, Mississippi,  USA c.1930 1933
(c. 2–3 years)
While performing surgery to remove a tumor on a woman from Inverness, Mississippi, Dr. L.T. Miller discovered the lithopedion "that had become petrified to the right of the tumor."[14]
Unknown (54) Jamaica 1957 1966
(9 years)
The patient, who had given birth previously, had a swollen belly and noted movement inside, but did not believe she was pregnant because she continued to menstruate, albeit irregularly. The movements ceased shortly after being admitted to a Kingston hospital but the bleeding and pain continued until she was operated on 8 months later. Although her belly had deflated, the patient still felt a mass inside, but was told by her doctor that it was not important. The pain resumed years later, when the woman had migrated to Toronto, Ontario, Canada, and she was relieved of an oval-shaped, calcified mass of 8 X 4 X 3 cm.[15]
Unknown (60)  Thailand 1959 1987
(28 years)
[16]
Unknown (76)  Republic of China 1950 1999
(49 years)
Patient was originally diagnosed with a benign tumor in 1950, but refused the operation to extract it.[17]
Unknown (67) Washington State,  USA 1962 1999; not extracted
(37 years)
Admitted with abdominal pain, the patient reported to have "missed the baby" during a pregnancy 37 years prior, but refused intervention. She suffered no consequences and carried a second intrauterine pregnancy to term with no problem. Pain episode resolved and patient released without attempt of extraction.[18]
Unknown (40) Campinas, Sao Paulo,  Brazil 1982 2000
(18 years)
The "patient reported regular abdominal growth and healthy fetal activity from a pregnancy that happened 18 years earlier. She had never done pre-natal follow-up. In the third trimester, she had started to feel strong cramps in the lower abdomen at the same time that fetal activity disappeared. She had not looked for medical assistance and some weeks later she had eliminated a dark red mass through the vagina with a placental appearance. She had experienced the characteristic modifications of breast lactation. The abdomen had started to decrease but retained an infra-umbilical mass of about 20 centimeters in diameter, mobile and painless."[3]
Zahra Aboutalib (75) Grand Casablanca,  Morocco 1955 2001
(46 years)
Probably the most documented case. Heavily pregnant, Aboutalib went through labor pains for 48 hours at her own home before being taken to a hospital, where she was scheduled for a cesarean section. However, after witnessing another young woman dying during the procedure she feared for her life and fled the hospital. The pain ceased days later and did not return for 46 years, when the still unidentified lithopedion was initially mistaken for an ovarian tumor. Aboutalib never bore children again after her ectopic pregnancy, but adopted three.[19][20][21]
Unknown (80)  South Africa 1960 2001
(c. 40 years)
An 80-year-old woman presented in the outpatient department with severe abdominal pain. Ultrasound examination revealed a large echogenic mass (20 x 20 cm) in the right upper quadrant. An abdominal x-ray demonstrated the skeleton of a fully developed extrauterine fetus. It is presumed from the patient's history that this fetus was present for at least 40 years. Radiography revealed a fetus shrouded in a mantle of calcification. The fetus was hyper-flexed with other signs of "intrauterine" death. Fetal dentition charts dated the fetus at 34 weeks, the epiphyses being obscured by extensive calcification. In addition to subcutaneous calcification there was extensive visceral and intracranial calcification.[22]
Unknown (63) Daegu,  South Korea 1961 2001
(40 years)
Postterm abdominal pregnancy extended beyond nine months, after which fetal movement ceased and the mother suffered from vaginal bleeding, but never gave birth. The patient became pregnant again and gave birth to a healthy baby girl two years later.[23]
Unknown (33)  Ghana 1990 2002
(12 years)
Third pregnancy after two natural miscarriages. Patient experienced abdominal pain, bilateral tubal blockage and infertility.[24]
Unknown (40) Burla, Odisha,  India 1999 2007
(8 years)
Only known case of twin lithopedia. One embryo grew in each ovary until both died 5 months into development; the patient assumed she had suffered a normal natural miscarriage. She had pain in both sides of the lower abdomen through the following 8 years, when it was joined by abdominal distention, vomiting and intestinal constipation.[4]
Unknown (31) Curaren, Francisco Morazán,  Honduras 1995 2008
(13 years)
The ectopic pregnancy happened shortly after the birth of the patient's first child. Afterwards she was pregnant seven times more, giving birth to her last child just two months before the diagnosis.[25]
Unknown (68) Northern Cape,  South Africa 1986 2011; not extracted
(25 years)
Fourth pregnancy, when the patient was aged 44. Resulted in infertility, which was taken for a case of early menopause, but was otherwise asymptomatic.[26]
Unknown (37) Malongo,  Democratic Republic of the Congo 2009 2011
(3 years)
Patient went through the same experience as in her previous eight pregnancies, but "the baby never came out". Surgeons retrieved a calcified 32 weeks fetus from the abdominal cavity; the ovaries and uterus were intact and the patient had her period regularly.[27]
Unknown (32) Santa Clara, Waspam,  Nicaragua 2010 2011
(35 weeks)
Patient in her third pregnancy. Was hospitalized because she did not feel fetal movement anymore.[28]
Antamma (70) Mominpur, West Bengal,  India 1977 2012
(35 years)
Admitted to hospital after complaining of stomach pain for some time. The patient had delivered three healthy children after this incomplete pregnancy.[29]
Huang Yijun (92)  People's Republic of China 1948 2013
(65 years)
Longest known case. The patient was informed that the fetus had died inside her in 1948, but she did not remove it earlier because she lacked the money.[30]
Unknown
(82)
Bogota,  Colombia 1973 2013; not extracted
(40 years)
Patient originally thought to be suffering from gastroenteritis but an abdominal radiography discovered a calcified fetus in her abdomen.[31]
Unknown
(70)
Tamil Nadu,  India 1962 2014; not extracted
(52 years)
Patient presented with history of purulent discharge per vagina. Treated as purulent inflammation of cervix after biopsy report. Subsequently, condition resolved followed by history of pain and breathlessness. On radiography, it was found that the patient had a lithopedion fetus in her abdomen. She was asymptomatic through her reproductive life.
Joaquina Costa Leite
(84)
Natividade, Tocantins State,  Brazil 1970 2014; not extracted (44 years) Patient was having abdominal pain, when doctors discovered the fetus. She claimed to have been pregnant more than 40 years prior. After extreme pain back then, she saw a local traditional healer who gave her medication that ended the pain, and – she had assumed – miscarried the baby.[32]
Estela Meléndez
(90)
San Antonio,  Chile 1965 2015; not extracted
(50 years)
A 2 kg (4.4 lb) calcified fetus was discovered in the abdomen of a 90-year-old Chilean woman. The discovery was made during an X-ray examination after the lady was brought to the hospital following a fall. The lithopedion, which is believed to have been there for 50 years, was so large and developed, it occupied the whole abdominal cavity. The fetus was not removed on the grounds of the patient's age.[33]
Kantabai Thakre
(60)
Nagpur,  India 1978 2015 (37 years) Thakre was warned that her pregnancy was ectopic and would not be successful, but she was afraid of surgery and returned home, where she took remedies to alleviate the pain only. The pains disappeared a few months later, but they returned after 37 years. Fearing cancer, Thakre sought hospital treatment, was diagnosed and had the fetus remains extracted.[34]

See also

Notes

  1. Spitz, Werner U.; Spitz, Daniel J., eds. (2006). "Chapter III: Time of Death and Changes after Death. Part 1: Anatomical Considerations.". Spitz and Fisher's medicolegal investigation of death : guidelines for the application of pathology to crime investigation (4th ed.). Springfield, Ill.: Charles C. Thomas. pp. 87–127. ISBN 0398075441. OCLC 56614481.
  2. Bondeson, Jan (2000). The two-headed boy, and other medical marvels. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. pp. 39–41. ISBN 0801437679. OCLC 43296582.
  3. Passini, Renato; Knobel, Roxana; Parpinelli, Mary Ângela; Pereira, Belmiro Gonçalves; Amaral, Eliana; de Castro Surita, Fernanda Garanhani; de Araújo Lett, Caio Rogério (November 2000). "Calcified abdominal pregnancy with eighteen years of evolution: case report". São Paulo Medical Journal. 118 (6): 192–94. doi:10.1590/S1516-31802000000600008. PMID 11120551.
  4. Mishra JM, Behera TK, Panda BK, Sarangi K; Behera; Panda; Sarangi (September 2007). "Twin lithopaedions: a rare entity" (PDF). Singapore Medical Journal. 48 (9): 866–68. PMID 17728971.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. Rothschild BM, Rothschild C, Bement LC; Rothschild; Bement (July 1993). "Three-millennium antiquity of the lithokelyphos variety of lithopedion". American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology. 169 (1): 140–41. doi:10.1016/0002-9378(93)90148-c. PMID 8333440.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  6. Wednesday Wonders #3: The Lithopedion Archived 23 November 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  7. Stofft, Henri. Un lithopédion en 1678. [One case of Lithopaedion in 1678.] (1986) Histoire des sciences médicales, 20 (3), pp. 267–86 http://www.biusante.parisdescartes.fr/sfhm/hsm/HSMx1986x020x003/HSMx1986x020x003x0267.pdf
  8. Schumann, Edward A. (1924) Extra-uterine pregnancy. D. Appleton, 189 pp.
  9. Encyclopédie, Ou Dictionnaire Universel Raisonné Des Connoissances Humaines: Con – Impu (1775), Volume 3, 782 pp.
  10. Bondenson, Jan (2000) The Two-headed Boy, and Other Medical Marvels. Cornell University, pp. 46–47
  11. Morand, S.F. (1748) Histoire de l'Enfant de Joigny, qui a été treinte-un ans dans le ventre de sa mère; avec de remarques sur les phénoménes de cette espèce. Histoire de l'Academie Royale des Sciences: année MDCCXLVIII, avec les mémoires de mathématique [et] de physique, pour la même année, tirés des registres de cette Académie, Académie des Sciences, pp. 108–22
  12. Stengel C., Udfaldet af et tiaarigt Svangerskab, Eyr, Vol. 2, 1827, pp. 134–37.
  13. Bernard, Grace Parkhurst (1947). "Lithopedion from the Case of Dr. William H. H. Parkhurst, 1853". Bulletin of the History of Medicine. 21 (3): 377–78. PMID 20257377.
  14. "Unusual case is treated by colored doctor". Yazoo Herald. Yazoo City, Mississippi. 13 October 1933. p. 1. Retrieved 6 January 2018. Dr. Miller states that he knew there was a growth of some kind in the stomach besides the tumor, and was much surprised after removing the tumor to discover a lithopaedion, a dead foetus (child) that had become petrified to the right of the tumor.
  15. Chase, A. L. (1968). "Lithopedion". Canadian Medical Association Journal. 99 (5): 226–30. PMC 1924357. PMID 5671128.
  16. Srisomboon, Jatupol; Maneewattana, Trong; Simarak, Suri; Koonlertkij, Sompong; Sirivatanapa, Pannee (March 1988). "Chronic abdominal pregnancy (Lithopedion): A case report". Chiang Mai Medical Journal. 27 (1): 45–52.
  17. http://homepage.vghtpe.gov.tw/~jcma/6406/640608.pdf%5B%5D
  18. Frayer CA, Hibbert ML; Hibbert (July 1999). "Abdominal pregnancy in a 67-year-old woman undetected for 37 years. A case report". The Journal of Reproductive Medicine. 44 (7): 633–35. PMID 10442329.
  19. "Zahra Aboutalib – The 46 Year Pregnancy". RareHumans.com. Archived from the original on 27 July 2013. Retrieved 21 August 2013.
  20. Rosenhek, Jackie (September 2008). "Fetal rock". Doctor's Review. Montreal: Parkhurst. Retrieved 21 August 2013.
  21. "The 46-Year Pregnancy". Extraordinary People. Season 3. Episode 1. 23 March 2005. 60 minutes in. Channel 5 (UK).
  22. Lachman N, Satyapal KS, Kalideen JM, Moodley TR; Satyapal; Kalideen; Moodley (2001). "Lithopedion: a case report". Clinical Anatomy. 14 (1): 52–54. doi:10.1002/1098-2353(200101)14:1<52::AID-CA1009>3.0.CO;2-H. PMID 11135399.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  23. Kim, Mi Suk; Park, Soyoon; Lee, Tae Sung (April 2002). "Old abdominal pregnancy presenting as an ovarian neoplasm". Journal of Korean Medical Science. 17 (2): 274–75. doi:10.3346/jkms.2002.17.2.274. PMC 3054860. PMID 11961318.
  24. http://www.txfertility.com/forms/38%20Lithopedion%20laproscopic%20diagnosis%20and%20removal.pdf%5B%5D%5B%5D
  25. http://www.bvs.hn/RMH/pdf/2006/pdf/Vol74-3-2006-6.pdf%5B%5D
  26. Ede J, Sobnach S, Castillo F, Bhyat A, Corbett JH; Sobnach; Castillo; Bhyat; Corbett (August 2011). "The lithopedion – an unusual cause of an abdominal mass". South African Journal of Surgery. 49 (3): 140–41. PMID 21933501.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  27. http://hcp.obgyn.net/pregnancy-and-birth/content/article/1760982/1979439 Archived 15 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  28. http://www.redalyc.org/pdf/1800/180023391011.pdf%5B%5D
  29. "35 year old 'stone baby' removed from 70 year old woman's womb". Siasat.com. Retrieved 5 February 2012.
  30. Osayimwen, Etinosa (2 April 2013). "92-yr-old woman Miraculously delivers 'stone baby' after 60 yrs pregnancy". The Herald. Archived from the original on 17 October 2013. Retrieved 21 August 2013.
  31. Nelson, Sara (12 December 2013). "Stone Baby: Doctors Find 40-Year-Old Lithopaedion Foetus In Body Of Woman, 82". Huffington Post UK. Retrieved 12 December 2013.
  32. Smith, Lydia (12 February 2014). "Four Decades Old 'Stone Baby' Inside Brazilian Pensioner". International Business Times. Retrieved 13 February 2014.
  33. "Chilean woman 'carried calcified foetus for 50 years'". BBC News. 20 June 2015.
  34. The Independent

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