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Hysterectomy
What is hysterectomy?
Hysterectomy is the surgical removal of the uterus.
Reasons for having a hysterectomy:
The following are several possible causes or reasons for hysterectomy:
- fibroid tumors
non-malignant tumors that often grow to large sizes causing pressure
on other organs, and may cause heavy bleeding or pelvic pain.
- endometriosis
endometrial cells sometimes grow outside of the uterus, attach
themselves to other organs in the pelvic cavity, and bleed each
month in accordance with an ovarian cycle. This can result in
chronic pelvic pain, pain during sex, and prolonged or heavy bleeding.
- endometrial hyperplasia
a cause of abnormal bleeding, this over-thickening of the uterine
lining is often due to the presence of very high levels of estrogen.
- cancer
approximately 10 percent of hysterectomies are performed to treat
cancer either cervical, ovarian or endometrial.
- blockage of the bladder or intestines
by the uterus, or a growth.
What are the different types of hysterectomy?
- total hysterectomy
Includes the removal of the entire uterus, including the fundus
(the part of the uterus above the openings of the fallopian tubes)
and the cervix, but not the ovaries.
- hysterectomy with bilateral oophorectomy
Includes the removal of one or both ovaries, and sometimes the
fallopian tubes, along with the uterus.
- radical hysterectomy
Includes the removal of the uterus, cervix, the top portion of
the vagina, most of the tissue that surrounds the cervix in the
pelvic cavity, and may include the removal of the pelvic lymph
nodes.
- supracervical hysterectomy (subtotal hysterectomy)
Removal of the body of the uterus while leaving the cervix intact.
What are the procedures for performing hysterectomy?
- abdominal hysterectomy
The uterus is removed through the abdomen via a surgical incision
about 6-8 inches long. This procedure is most commonly used when
the ovaries and fallopian tubes are being removed, when the uterus
is enlarged, or when disease has spread to the pelvic cavity as
in endometriosis or cancer. The main surgical incision can be
made either vertically, which will run from about your navel down
to your pubic bone, or horizontally, which will run along the
top of the pubic hairline.
- vaginal hysterectomy
The uterus is removed through the vaginal opening. This procedure
is most often used in cases of uterine prolapse, or when vaginal
repairs are necessary for related conditions. No external incision
is made, which means there is no visible scarring.
- laparoscopically-assisted vaginal hysterectomy
Vaginal hysterectomy is performed with the aid of a laparoscope.
Thin tubes are inserted through tiny incisions in the abdomen
near the navel. The uterus is then removed in sections through
the scoping tube or through the vagina.
Facts about hysterectomy:
About 600,000 hysterectomies are performed in the US each year.
More than half of hysterectomies are performed on women ages 35
to 49.
Annual rates for hysterectomy do not significantly differ by race.
Almost twice as many women in the South have hysterectomies as
women in the Northeast.
The most common conditions for hysterectomy are:
- fibroid tumors
- endometriosis
- uterine prolapse
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