Trade-offs in fibroids treatments.A minimally invasive procedure Minimally invasive surgical procedures avoid open invasive surgery in favor of closed or local surgery with less trauma. These procedures involve use of laparoscopic devices and remote-control manipulation of instruments with indirect observation of the surgical field through an to cure uterine fibroids Uterine Fibroids Definition Uterine fibroids (also called leiomyomas or myomas) are benign growths of the muscle inside the uterus. They are not cancerous, nor are they related to cancer. was less expensive, but also less effective, than surgery in a new study. Uterine fibroids are benign tumors that can cause pain and heavy bleeding. Hysterectomy hysterectomy (hĭstərĕk`təmē), surgical removal of the uterus. A hysterectomy may involve removal of the uterus only or additional removal of the cervix (base of the uterus), fallopian tubes (salpingectomy), and ovaries is the only sure cure for fibroids Fibroids Benign tumors of muscle and connective tissue that develop within or are attached to the uterine wall. Mentioned in: Menstrual Disorders , but that procedure ends a woman's reproductive capacity. Alternatively, doctors can surgically remove only the fibroids. In a third, newer approach, called uterine-artery embolization embolization /em·bo·li·za·tion/ (em?bo-li-za´shun) 1. the process or condition of becoming an embolus. 2. therapeutic introduction of a substance into a vessel in order to occlude it. , a doctor shrinks the fibroids by inserting barriers within small arteries that supply the fibroids with blood. Researchers identified 157 women with fibroids embedded in the uterine wall and randomly assigned 106 to get embolization, 43 to get hysterectomies, and 8 to undergo surgical removal of fibroids. The patients getting either type of surgery averaged 5 days of hospitalization, whereas embolization patients were in the hospital just a single day. Rates of complication were similar for the procedures. But 10 of the women getting embolization required a further procedure--either surgery or another embolization--when fibroids recurred during the first year. One surgical patient, who underwent fibroid-only removal, subsequently needed a hysterectomy. One year after any of the initial procedures, measurements of a woman's quality-of-life were about the same for the three groups, report Jonathan G. Moss of Gartnavel Hospital in Glasgow, Scotland, and his colleagues in the Jan. 25 New England Journal of Medicine The New England Journal of Medicine (New Engl J Med or NEJM) is an English-language peer-reviewed medical journal published by the Massachusetts Medical Society. It is one of the most popular and widely-read peer-reviewed general medical journals in the world. .--N.S. |
|
||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion