1 / 20

In The Name of God Abortion &Hysteroscopy

In The Name of God Abortion &Hysteroscopy. Shirin Ghazizadeh Tehran University of Medical Sciences Aban 1393. Role of Hysteroscopy in Abortion. Recurrent pregnancy loss (RPL) Retained tissue Polyp/myoma Uterine synechia Septate uterus. Recurrent pregnancy loss (RPL).

Download Presentation

In The Name of God Abortion &Hysteroscopy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. In The Name of God Abortion &Hysteroscopy Shirin Ghazizadeh Tehran University of Medical Sciences Aban 1393

  2. Role of Hysteroscopy in Abortion • Recurrent pregnancy loss (RPL) • Retained tissue • Polyp/myoma • Uterine synechia • Septate uterus

  3. Recurrent pregnancy loss (RPL) • >3 (non)consecutive losses of clinically recognized pregnancies <20th w <500gr • (ectopic, molar, and biochemical pregnancies are not included) • It may be primary or secondary • ASRM >2 failed pregnancies (ultrasound or histopathological) 

  4. Retained tissue • Hysteroscopy removal is much less traumatic

  5. Retained fetal bones • Iatrogenic secondary infertility caused by residual intrauterine fetal bone after midtrimester abortion. • An intrauterine device-like effect

  6. Sub mucousal myoma / polyp • Abnormal uterine bleeding • Recurrent pregnancy loss • Infertility

  7. Polyps • Premenopausal • symptomatic polyps • asymptomatic polyps >1.5 • Postmenopausal • all endometrial polyps (Grade 1B)

  8. Hysterscopic Myomectomy •  European Society of Hysteroscopy (ESH) • Type 0 - completely within the cavity • Type I - extend < 50 % into the myometrium • Type II - extend >50 % within the myometrium

  9. Distinguishing myoma versus myometrium

  10. Intrauterine adhesions

  11. Intrauterine adhesions • Trauma • missed or incomplete abortion, postpartum hemorrhage, or retained placental remnants  • Genital tuberculosis

  12. Intrauterine adhesions • Foley cath. compared with IUD • ↑ Normal menses (81 versus 63%) • ↑ conception rates (34 versus 23 %) • ↓ Need for reoperation  • 5 mg estrogen daily for 30 days

  13. Uterine septum

  14. Uterine septum • semirigid or rigid scissors (5-7 French) • Bi/unipolar wire • (KTP/532), (Nd:YAG), or argon lasers.

  15. hysteroscopic correction of arcuate uterus prior to IVF? • Measurement by sonohysterography • Fm (fundal myometrial thickness) • Cm (cornual myometrial thickness) • Incision of the incomplete septum. • Fm >11 mm • Fm-Cm >5 mm,

  16. Arcuate uterus • Metroplasty, as well as making the uterine cavity wider, leads to better uterine perfusion. • Improvement of uterine artery Doppler velocimetry indices after metroplasty

  17. Outpatient hysteroscopy and subsequent IVF cycle outcome • Meta-analyses of five studies • Improving result in subsequent IVF cycle • (relative risk = 1.75, 95% CI 1.51-2.03). • Mini-hysteroscopy with no intervention before IVF treatment

  18. "Chromohysteroscopy" • 5 ml of 1% methylene blue dye • Group I: 19 patients focal dark staining • 10 cases of endometritis • Group II: 15 patients diffuse light blue staining • normal histopathology

  19. Conclusion(1) • Diagnostic hysteroscopy should be a routine procedure during diagnostic laparoscopy in infertile women

  20. Conclusion(2) • Office mini-hysteroscopy should be incorporated in infertility work up

More Related