2023
DOI: 10.3389/fsurg.2023.1151901
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Myomectomy in infertile women: More harm than good?

Abstract: Adhesion formation following gynecological surgery remains a challenge. The adoption of minimally invasive surgical approaches, such as conventional or robotic-assisted laparoscopy combined with meticulous microsurgical principles and the application of adhesion–reducing substances, is able to reduce the risk of de novo adhesion formation but do not eliminate it entirely. Myomectomy is the most adhesiogenic surgical procedure and postoperative adhesions can have a significant impact on the ability to conceive.… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…However, the patient populations in these studies were extremely small, many patients underwent more than one procedure and three out of eight patients (37.5%) experienced post-surgical synechiae. This is a significant concern, as for a patient hoping to become pregnant, developing intrauterine synechiae after hysteroscopic myomectomy could lead to replacing one problem with a more complicated one [41]. It could be speculated that the classical slicing technique, even performed by an experienced surgeon, did not allow them to ensure a myoma resection without myometrium injury.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the patient populations in these studies were extremely small, many patients underwent more than one procedure and three out of eight patients (37.5%) experienced post-surgical synechiae. This is a significant concern, as for a patient hoping to become pregnant, developing intrauterine synechiae after hysteroscopic myomectomy could lead to replacing one problem with a more complicated one [41]. It could be speculated that the classical slicing technique, even performed by an experienced surgeon, did not allow them to ensure a myoma resection without myometrium injury.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%