Six nonneopiastic ovarian lesions which can simulate a neoplasm on clinical, gross, or microscopic examination are associated with pregnancy or the puerperium. These lesions can involute spontaneously after termination of pregnancy or are adequately treated by a conservative surgical approach. Under the literature knowledge we had presented a case of luteoma of pregnancy, an uncommon ovarian lesion that is usually detected incidentally during cesarean section or postpartum tubal ligation.
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