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  1. 9 de jun. de 2022 · Acknowledging the important steps that have already been taken in the classification of congenital uterine anomalies (ASRM MAC2021 1, ASRM 2016 9, ESHRE/ESGE 2013 20 and 2016 59, and CUME 6, 7), the next step should be to achieve international consensus on a universally accepted classification system, which takes into account the strengths and limitations of all available classifications and ...

  2. American Fertility Society. Classification of adnexal adhesions, distal tubal occlusion, tubal occlusion secondary to tubal ligation, tubal pregnancies, mullerian anomalies, and intrauterine adhesions. Fertil Steril 1988;49: 944–55. Buttram VC Jr, Gibbons WE. Mullerian anomalies: a proposed classification. (An analysis of 144 cases).

  3. 9 de jun. de 2022 · Acknowledging the important steps that have already been taken in the classification of congenital uterine anomalies (ASRM MAC2021 1, ASRM 2016 9, ESHRE/ESGE 2013 20 and 2016 59, and CUME 6, 7), the next step should be to achieve international consensus on a universally accepted classification system, which takes into account the strengths and limitations of all available classifications and ...

  4. ASRM Müllerian Anomalies Classification 2021: a critical review. ASRM Müllerian Anomalies Classification 2021: a critical review. Ultrasound Obstet Gynecol. 2022 Jul;60 (1):7-21. doi: 10.1002/uog.24905. Epub 2022 Jun 9.

  5. In this issue of Fertility and Sterility, the Müllerian Anomaly Task Force of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM) (previously known as the American Fertility Society [AFS]) introduces us to a long-awaited new classification system for müllerian anomalies (1). The most commonly used previous classification, the AFS system, was published in 1988 (2). It was limited to uterine ...

  6. 7 de nov. de 2021 · ASRM created a classification system to classify Mullerian anomalies, called the ASRM Mullerian Anomaly Classification 2021 (also referred to as MAC2021). This classification system builds on the previously popular classification system, The American Fertility (AFS) Classification from 1988 by including cervical and vaginal anomalies.

  7. Müllerian anomalies occur in 3%–6% of females, and owing to a variability in presentation, imaging, and exam findings, they are often misdiagnosed, leading to delays in definitive diagnosis and treatment.1 These anomalies arise owing to alterations in the process of müllerian duct formation, fusion, and/or canalization that typically occurs during the first 20 weeks of gestation.2 The ...