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The Two
Part Uterine Fibroid Technique
How I found
a way to keep my uterus and quickly get back to my daily life (Page
2)
Dr. John George, Director of Gynecologic Endoscopy at Washington
Hospital Center, describes the Laparoscopic Myomectomy that he
performed.
Dr.
George said, “I spoke to the patient in question who is recovering
nicely. Her surgery was an outpatient laparoscopic myomectomy on Monday,
October 27, 2008. She is up and around and happy to be going on short
trips to the store. Susan anticipates returning to full activity two
weeks after her surgery.
Susan is 37 years of age, African American, single and without children.
Her fibroid uterus had grown to the size of a 22-week pregnancy. She
could no longer tolerate the large abdominal size, pressure on her
bladder and abnormal uterine bleeding. She wanted to preserve her uterus
but did not want to be disabled for six weeks from an abdominal
myomectomy. She consulted Dr. James Spies, an Interventional
Radiologist, but was not a good candidate for Uterine Fibroid
Embolization because one of the fibroids was pedunculated. Dr. Spies
agreed to do the UFE if I would perform a laparoscopic myomectomy the
following week to remove the pedunculated fibroid.
At laparoscopy, I easily
removed the pedunculated fibroid. After careful evaluation of the entire
uterus I thought that it was feasible to remove all fibroids. I
proceeded to remove at least 12 fibroids from all levels of the uterus.
The combined weight was 1063 grams, (a normal uterus weighs 80 grams).
Blood loss was not excessive. There were no operative or post-operative
complications.
I am not aware of similar cases in which all
fibroids were removed by laparoscopy after UFE. It is my impression that
embolization by decreasing the blood supply to the uterus makes
laparoscopic myomectomy more feasible.
While I perform more than 90% of myomectomies as outpatient
laparoscopic, the procedure is tedious and requires careful patient
selection, precise operative techniques including methods to minimize
blood loss, laparoscopic suture reconstruction of the uterus, and a
reliable method of removing the fibroids from the abdomen.
I tend to deselect patients with more than ten fibroids or an overall
uterine size greater than 20 weeks.”
Note: The uterine fibroid
surgery photos are graphic in nature!
Photos of the Laparoscopic Myomectomy

Partial view of the uterus

Pedunculated
fibroid
 Preparing to remove the fibroid by injecting Pitressin. |
Pitressin is a drug that decreases bleeding during
uterine surgery by
causing the blood vessels in the area where injected to go into spasm.

Pedunculated
fibroid removal

Removing one
of several fibroids

Removing
other fibroids
Continue to more uterine fibroids surgery photos
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