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Treatments include uterine fibroid embolization – which shrinks the tumor – and surgery. Surgical treatment for uterine tumors
most often involves the surgeon removing the entire uterus, via hysterectomy.3
While hysterectomy is a proven way to resolve fibroids, it may not be the best surgical treatment for every woman. If, for example, you
hope to later become pregnant, you may want to consider alternatives to hysterectomy like myomectomy. Myomectomy is a uterine-preserving
procedure performed to remove uterine fibroids.
Types of Myomectomy
Each year, roughly 65,000 myomectomies are performed in the U.S.4 The conventional approach to myomectomy is open surgery, through a large
abdominal incision.5 After cutting around and removing each uterine fibroid, the surgeon must carefully repair the uterine wall to minimize
potential uterine bleeding, infection and scarring. Proper repair is also critical to reducing the risk of uterine rupture during future pregnancies. Menorrhagia is extensive menstrual bleeding.
While myomectomy is also performed laparoscopically, this approach can be challenging for the surgeon, and may compromise results compared
to open surgery.6 Laparoscopic myomectomies often take longer than open abdominal myomectomies, and up to 28% are
converted during surgery to an open abdominal incision.7
A new category of minimally invasive myomectomy, da Vinci® Myomectomy, combines the best of open and laparoscopic surgery. With the assistance
of the da Vinci Surgical System – the latest evolution in robotics technology – surgeons may remove uterine fibroids
through small incisions with unmatched precision and control.
Learn more
If you would like to explore whether you are a candidate for myomectomy, ask your doctor.
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