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Re: ABCNEWS.com: Are Most Hysterectomies Unnecessary?From: Joanne Bulley, MD (islesannie@yahoo.com)Sun Aug 29 14:48:35 2004
I like the description from the ABC article: She was mildly sedated for the procedure. Tiny pellets were injected into a catheter inserted near the groin that is guided up to the uterine arteries. The pellets stop the flow of blood to the fibroid tumors, causing them to shrink and die. The pellets are made out of a plastic similar to contact lenses and stay in the artery permanently. The outcome statistics for uterine fibroid embolization are impressive — more than 90 percent symptom relief, with complications in only 2 percent to 5 percent of cases. Radiologists now routinely avoid the arteries near the cervix and vagina — which seems to minimize the risk of sexual dysfunction. Another advance has been the use of pain medication for the severe cramping that sometimes starts during the procedure. It can often last several days but can be well controlled with medication. How about the "Radiologists now routinely avoid the arteries near the cervix and vagina — which seems to minimize the risk of sexual dysfunction." The only uterine arteries ARE near the cervix and vagina! So what the ** are they talking about?! OK folks - who thinks 75% of those having hysts should have UAE intead? Joanne
At Sat, 28 Aug 2004, rmodugno@aol.com wrote:
>
-- Joanne Bulley, MD Keene, NH, USA
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