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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: hysterectomy + effects + what  Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/1/2008)

 News results: Standard Version | Text Version | Image Version Results 1 - 10 of about 18 for hysterectomy effects what. (1.16 seconds) 
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One family filled with hop
Jackson Clarion Ledger, MS -
The agency has ramped up efforts to close out its emergency housing program as the recovery effort has dragged on and concerns about the health effects of ...
Lymphadenectomy Does Not Improve Outcomes in Early-Stage ...
Medscape - Nov 26, 2008
The goal of the study was to determine whether adding systematic pelvic lymphadenectomy to standard hysterectomy with bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy was ...
Cervical cancer 2: Treatment options and side-effects
Nursing Times (registration), UK - Nov 11, 2008
If the woman has completed her family, a total abdominal hysterectomy with or without bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy is performed. ...

NHS Choices
Blood pressure after birth
NHS Choices, UK - Nov 28, 2008
The women were also required to not have had a hysterectomy or their ovaries removed, to not be taking blood pressure medication, heart medication or asthma ...
Living with cancer
Selma Enterprise, CA - Nov 26, 2008
Because of that, Noemi had to have a hysterectomy. This operation also came with unpleasant side effects, due to the imbalance of hormones caused by the ...
They just had to do something
News-Herald.com, OH - Nov 28, 2008
By Jason Lea JLea@News-Herald.com She needed a hysterectomy when she was diagnosed with uterine cancer in 1998. During the surgery, they found she also had ...
When to Get a Second Opinion
Newsweek - Nov 24, 2008
That's especially true if you a get a recommendation for a hysterectomy, an operation in which the uterus is removed. It's the second most common surgery ...
Testosterone Patch May Increase Low Libido in Postmenopausal Women
Medscape (registration) - Nov 11, 2008
Mean age of participants was 54 years, 89% were white, 73% had natural menopause, 27% had surgical menopause, and 43% had a hysterectomy. ...
Boulder woman's struggle with cancer leads to positive life changes
Daily Camera, CO - Nov 21, 2008
Until her world shook last summer, when she awoke to learn she'd had a complete hysterectomy. "Good morning to you too, doc," she said about the memory. ...
Menopause Mist
WHDH-TV, MA - Nov 20, 2008
Felice started getting hot flashes a week after her hysterectomy. Her body was thrown into menopause by the surgery - and she wasn't ready for the changes! ...
Source: Google News


 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: hysterectomy + 0.17 + web  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/7/2008)

UAE for fibroids "more cost-effective" than hysterectomy
Medicexchange, UK - Aug 4, 2008
Uterine artery embolization (UAE) is much more cost-efficient than hysterectomy for the treatment of uterine fibroids, an analysis from the Netherlands has ...

NEWS.com.au
Posh warned not to have more children
NEWS.com.au, Australia - Aug 5, 2008
Doctors are concerned the 34-year-old could need an emergency hysterectomy if the op goes wrong. It could also lead to a ruptured bowel or bladder. ...
No more kids for Posh Sky News Australia
all 6 news articles »
My Partner's Daughter Found My Ex's Texts
Glasgow Daily Record, UK -
She had to have a hysterectomy at the beginning of the year and was paid off because of this. Since then we have had only one wage coming in and we have a ...
Ilse?s anaesthetist sloppy, says advocate
The Herald Eastern Cape, South Africa - Aug 6, 2008
Botha and Van Heerden are accused of negligently causing the death of Malherbe after she underwent a routine hysterectomy in 2004. ...
No clear benefit of ovary removal with hysterectomy
Reuters - Jul 25, 2008
By Amy Norton NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - While it is common for women undergoing a hysterectomy to also have their healthy ovaries removed, ...
Removing Ovaries During Hysterectomy: Effects Remain Unknown
Science Daily (press release) - Jul 19, 2008
ScienceDaily (July 20, 2008) ? During hysterectomy operations, surgeons often remove a woman's ovaries as well as her uterus. Cochrane Researchers now say ...
Hysterectomy: Out With The Ovaries Or Not?
CBS News, NY - Jul 18, 2008
(WebMD) There is not enough evidence to justify the routine removal of the ovaries during hysterectomy -- a common practice that may convey as many risks as ...
Doctors suspended for mistaken hysterectomy
Turkish Daily News (subscription), Turkey - Jul 31, 2008
A 55-year-old woman who entered the operating room at the İzmir Dokuz Eyl?l University Hospital to get her cataract removed instead underwent a hysterectomy ...
ORLive Presents: Robotic-Assisted Hysterectomy
MarketWatch - Jul 15, 2008
Robotic-assisted hysterectomy provides patients with a shorter hospital stay and quicker recovery time. During the webcast, viewers have the opportunity to ...
Global Hysterectomy Market to Surpass $700 Million by 2012
MarketWatch - Jul 10, 2008
WALTHAM, Mass., July 10, 2008 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -- According to Millennium Research Group's Global Markets for Hysterectomy Alternatives 2008 report, ...
Source: Google News

Radical vaginal trachelectomy vs. radical hysterectomy for small early stage cervical cancer: A …
ME Beiner, J Hauspy, B Rosen, J Murphy, S … - Gynecol Oncol, 2008 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
... may not work well with NCBI's Web applications ... 95% and 100% of the groups, respectively
(p=0.17). ... occurred in the RVT and radical hysterectomy groups, resulting ...

Role of Wide/Radical Hysterectomy and Pelvic Lymph Node Dissection in Endometrial Cancer with … -
A Mariani, MJ Webb, GL Keeney, G Calori, KC … - Gynecologic Oncology, 2001 - Elsevier
... who satisfied the following inclusion criteria: (1) treatment included hysterectomy
and removal of ... RH is characterized by ligation of the lateral web at the ...

… ? 2-agonist for severe bladder dysfunction due to high-dose irradiation after radical hysterectomy
K Hamada, T Kihana, S Matsuura, M Kataoka, S … - International Urogynecology Journal, 1994 - Springer
... 2.71+ 0.05 2.69_+ 0.10 2.63_+ 0.17 length (cm ... It is apparent that radical hysterectomy
that involves ... of the paracervical and paravaginal web of retroperitoneal ...

NON-ORAL POSTER 71: Epidemiology of Hysterectomy in Olmsted County, Minnesota, 1965-2002: A …
EO Babalola, AE Bharucha, AR Zinsmeister, LJ … - Journal of Pelvic Medicine and Surgery, 2006 - jpelvicsurgery.com
... Preoperative voiding difficulty n 0 n 21 prior hysterectomy n 17 n 68 ... Concurrent
procedures High uterosacral suspension n 0 n 14 Vaginal hysterectomy n 0 n 11 ...
-

[CITATION] … Age mean/SD 63/11 65/12 Preoperative voiding difficulty n 0 n 21 prior hysterectomy n 17 n 68 prior …
O Sling, I Sling - Journal of Pelvic Medicine & Surgery, 2006

Intraoperative Lymphography Using Indocyanine Green Dye for Near-Infrared Fluorescence Labeling in … -
F Ogata, M Narushima, M Mihara, R Azuma, Y … - Annals of Plastic Surgery, 2007 - annalsplasticsurgery.com
... after undergoing a modified radical hysterectomy and irradiation ... of the foot and
a spider-web-like image ... of complications are very low (0.17%), including nausea ...

Carotid Wall Thickness and Years Since Bilateral Oophorectomy The Los Angeles Atherosclerosis Study -
KM Dwyer, CK Nordstrom, CN Bairey Merz, JH Dwyer - American Journal of Epidemiology, 2002 - Oxford Univ Press
... of maximum intima-media thickness on number of years since hysterectomy, with potential ...
and years since surgery in this group (Spearman r = 0.19, p = 0.17). ...

Preoperative Autologous Donation Decreases Allogeneic Transfusion but Increases Exposure to All Red … -
MA Forgie, PS Wells, A Laupacis, D Fergusson - Archives of Internal Medicine, 1998 - Am Med Assoc
... browser does not support basic Web standards. ... reported was 0.25 (95% CI, 0.17-0.37)
compared ... prostate surgery, vascular surgery, hysterectomy, mammoplasty, and ...

Asymptomatic Pneumatosis at CT Colonography: A Benign Self-Limited Imaging Finding Distinct from … -
PJ Pickhardt, DH Kim, AJ Taylor - American Journal of Roentgenology, 2008 - Am Roentgen Ray Soc
... This is a Web exclusive article ... automated carbon dioxide for colonic distention
(0.17%; six of ... a history of abdominal surgery for appendectomy and hysterectomy. ...

Growth of human preimplantation embryos in vitro -
RH Mehta - Reproductive BioMedicine Online, 2001 - ingentaconnect.com
... BioMedicine Online webpaper 2000/008 on web 7 Mar 2001 ... in excized Fallopian tubes
from women undergoing hysterectomy. ... respectively were: 0.53, 8.58 and 0.17 mM ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Hysterectomy Alternatives: Making Tough Choices

Today it's almost commonplace for women to have their uteruses removed. In fact, hysterectomy is the most common major gynecological operation in the United States. One reason for its popularity is that this type of surgery can treat a wide range of conditions, from cancer to uterine fibroids. Over the last five years, however, there has been controversy about whether physicians have been too quick to recommend hysterectomy.

Hysterectomy is a procedure in which a woman's uterus is surgically removed, but her estrogen-producing ovaries, are spared. According to the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, hysterectomy should only be recommended after alternative options have been explored with a patient, and that a woman who has been advised to have one should consider getting a second opinion.

A number of alternative procedures have been developed to treat fibroids, heavy menstrual bleeding and other conditions that might once have required the complete removal of the uterus. This may be particularly important for women who may want to preserve future fertility or who are poor candidates for surgery. But sometimes hysterectomy is the right choice, and newer, less invasive approaches have made it a much easier procedure from which to recover.

 

Below, Sandra Emmons, MD, an associate professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Oregon Health Sciences University (OSHU) and a physician in OSHU's alternatives to hysterectomy program, discusses women's options and how they can make the best possible decision.

What is a hysterectomy?
Well, the word "hysterectomy" means removal of the uterus and it encompasses the body of the uterus as well as the cervix. In talking about hysterectomy, we're not talking about removing the ovaries. I think one of the most common misunderstandings is that a woman having a hysterectomy has to have her ovaries out and therefore has to undergo menopause. It's certainly possible to leave the ovaries and remove the uterus and not cause a hormonal upset.

Why would a woman have a hysterectomy?
There are a lot of potential reasons why the uterus may be removed. On the most serious end of the spectrum, cervical cancer or uterine or ovarian cancer may prompt the hysterectomy.

A woman may have fibroid tumors, which is a benign condition that causes the smooth muscle of the uterus to grow, both inside and on the surface of the uterus, and become quite large. A woman may have a condition called adenomyosis, which also makes the uterus enlarge and bleed heavily with the periods. Women may have a condition called endometriosis, which causes pain with periods and sometimes even pain not associated with the menstrual periods. Women may have various prolapse conditions where the uterus falls outside the body through the vagina.

 
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There are also some ovarian conditions such as premalignant ovarian cysts where both the uterus and the affected ovary are removed.

How can hysterectomy be performed?
There are several ways of doing a hysterectomy. The most common method is abdominal hysterectomy, which means that the uterus is removed through an incision made in the abdomen. A vaginal hysterectomy refers to removing both the uterus and the cervix through the vagina so that there is no abdominal incision.

Vaginal hysterectomy is actually the least invasive approach. But not every woman is a candidate for that type of surgery. It requires that the cervix be taken, so if a woman wants to preserve her cervix that is not possible to do with this method. The other usual reason she might not be a candidate is if the uterus is too large. A lot of women have a hysterectomy because of uterine fibroids and that may make the uterus too bulky to remove vaginally.

Then there are two ways of removing the uterus laparoscopically, which means that a fiber-optic instrument is used to examine the abdominal cavity. One is what's called a laparoscopically assisted vaginal hysterectomy. A laparoscope is used to disconnect a portion of the uterus that's inside the abdomen. Then a vaginal incision is made and the cervix and uterus are removed through the vagina.

A woman can recover more quickly from the laparoscopic method because the incisions are much smaller. And there is not nearly so much postoperative discomfort after the laparoscopic approach as there is with abdominal surgery.

How long is the recovery period?
It depends on what sort of hysterectomy is done and why she is having it. If a woman has a laparoscopic or vaginal hysterectomy and is not ill going into the procedure, she may recover in two or three weeks. But, if a woman has cancer and has a hysterectomy, it's probably going to take two or three months to recover. If a woman is severely anemic and has a hysterectomy, it will probably take a couple of months to recover and get the blood count back to normal.

When is hormone therapy an option?
Hormone therapy is an option that works very well for women who are having abnormal bleeding due to an imbalance in their hormones. And that can take the form of something as simple as birth control pills or Depo-Provera injections.

There is also a very strong hormone therapy called gonadotropin-releasing hormone that essentially puts a woman into menopause, which, of course, makes her quit bleeding.

For women having abnormal bleeding caused by fibroids, endometriosis or adenomyosis, hormone therapy is only successful in maybe 50 percent to 60 percent of the cases.

What are some alternative surgeries for fibroids or heavy bleeding?
There is a surgical treatment called myomectomy, which is a surgery that removes just the fibroid and not the entire uterus.

For fibroids that grow only on the inside of the uterus there is a procedure where the fibroid is removed through a hysteroscopy, where a scope is placed inside the uterus and the fibroid is then removed.

There is also a procedure called uterine artery embolization. In this procedure, little pellets are released in the uterine artery to clog it up so that the blood supply to the fibroids is cut off. That causes the fibroids to die and thereby shrink.

And finally, there is a procedure that cauterizes or lasers the lining of the uterus so that it no longer can cycle or have normal periods. In that way, you also cut down on menstrual bleeding.

What are the benefits of these surgeries?
Both myomectomy and hysterectomy are equally invasive and have essentially the same hospital stay and recovery associated with it. But, maintaining the uterus is obviously important to women who want kids and some women just have a preference to keep all their organs as long as they can.

In terms of the uterine artery embolization procedure, the recovery from that is probably equivalent to the recovery from a simple laparoscopic or vaginal hysterectomy. It's in the two-to-three-week range. And of course, it avoids any abdominal incision or vaginal incision.

Hysteroscopy is significantly less invasive than hysterectomy. The woman usually goes home right afterwards and only requires three to five days of recovery.

What are alternative surgeries for uterine prolapse?
Most of the time what that involves is strengthening the ligaments, which form a support structure that holds the uterus up. Sometimes it involves using a graft or artificial tissue to attach to the uterus back up to the backbone.

Aside from maintaining fertility, what are the benefits of keeping the uterus?
There are three reasons to maintain the uterus. One is certainly just personal choice. As I said, some people strongly prefer to maintain their organs if at all possible. I think that needs to be respected if there is no life-threatening cause for hysterectomy.

The other two reasons are really not scientific but are certainly being discussed. I think we will have studies on them in the future. One is a theory that doing a hysterectomy may increase a woman's risk of developing vaginal prolapse in the future; that detaching the uterus from the supporting ligament, and removing the cervix, may increase her risk of vaginal prolapse.

The last reason, which has been discussed in the lay press but really has not been shown to be true in the studies that have been published in the medical journals, is the theory that orgasm may be different following hysterectomy. Some women feel contractions in their cervix or the uterus, and, if a woman's sexual response involves that, it would clearly be absent after the organ is removed.

So is sexual desire and response different following hysterectomy?
There is this common belief that after hysterectomy a woman's sexual appeal or sexual desire will go away. That's not been found to be true, particularly if there is no hormonal change associated with the procedure. Usually sexual response remains the same before and after the hysterectomy.

What do you think a woman's steps should be if she's been told that she needs a hysterectomy?
I think she should have a clear understanding of why she has been advised to have a hysterectomy. Is it because of bleeding? Is it because of a possible cancer? Is it because of a large mass? She should also have an understanding of how the surgery is going to be accomplished.

I think a woman needs to understand if, in her particular case, any of the nonsurgical options are possible, and then, she also needs to do some self-analysis as to what would give her the best outcome in terms of her lifestyle. Sometimes it sounds very attractive to do a less invasive procedure that will allow for a quick recovery because of lifestyle issues such as responsibilities to family, work scheduling, plans for travel. So sometimes a woman may choose a less invasive procedure that has a lower success rate because she can't take six weeks off to have an abdominal hysterectomy, even though, ultimately, that may be what she needs to do to resolve the problem.

 

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