Home Blogs Gynecology and Obstetrics Surgical Technique Used in Fibroid Removal Surgery
Written By Anha Wahid Ansari
Gynecology and Obstetrics
Imagine that you live with a constant shadow, unseen and ever-present which causes discomfort and disrupts the rhythm of life, and for women fibroids are these shadows.
Most people with uterine fibroids show no symptoms. However, those who do might experience symptoms based on the fibroids' location, size, and number.
There are various surgical techniques available such as hysteroscopy, laparoscopy, laparotomy, or robotic-assisted myomectomy.
To obtain more information about how these techniques help, you need to read this article until the end.
Fibroids are common but it is challenging for doctors to determine how many people have them, yet not everyone can experience symptoms.
Fibroids can grow large, even as big as a grapefruit. However, they are usually small and often go unnoticed but some people with these small fibroids don't need surgery or other treatments.
Yet, others face symptoms like abdominal pain, pressure, and bloating. They may also suffer from pain during sex, frequent urination, and heavy periods, and for them, surgery might be necessary.
Your surgeon can recommend a hysteroscopic myomectomy to treat submucosal fibroids, which are tiny fibroids that protrude noticeably into your uterus. Through your cervix and vagina, your surgeon inserts equipment called a hysteroscope into your uterus to access and remove the fibroids.
A tiny incision is made in or close to your bellybutton by your surgeon. Next, the surgeon will introduce a laparoscope, which is a little tube with a camera inside of it, into your belly. Through further tiny abdominal wall incisions, your surgeon makes the necessary instrument incisions to execute the procedure.
Your surgeon will make an open abdominal incision during an abdominal myomectomy (laparotomy) in order to reach your uterus and remove fibroids. If at all possible, your surgeon will often want to make a low, horizontal ("bikini line") incision. When the uterus is larger, vertical incisions are required.
Similar to a laparoscopic myomectomy, your surgeon makes tiny incisions to introduce the instruments, and from a separate console, he or she regulates how the devices move. These days, some surgeons conduct robotic and single-port (one-incision) laparoscopic myomectomies.
Fibroid removal surgery or myomectomy is processed by using various techniques which include hysteroscopy, laparoscopy, laparotomy, or robotic-assisted myomectomy the best method depends on the size, number, and location of fibroids and also the patient’s specific factors.
Written By
Anha Wahid Ansari is a dedicated content writer passionate about delivering high-quality articles. With a flair for creativity and thorough research, she crafts engaging and memorable narratives that inspire and inform readers.
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