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Uterine Conditions & Treatment
When a woman faces a medical condition that affects her uterus, the hollow, muscular organ that holds and feeds a fertilized egg, the emotional
impact can often be as challenging as the physical. These conditions include, but are not limited to, cervical and uterine cancers such
as endometrial cancer, uterine fibroids, uterine prolapse, excessive bleeding and endometriosis.
Treatment options are as varied as the conditions themselves, depending on individual circumstances. A woman’s age, health history, surgical
history and diagnosis (benign or cancerous), all factor into the recommended course of action.
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Sparrow Robotics
Sparrow Robotics
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Gynecology procedures currently performed at Sparrow with the da Vinci® robot:
- hysterectomy w/wo BSO
- hysterectomy with lymph node excision
- fibroidectomy
- sacrocolpopexy
- radical hysterectomy
- ovarian cystectomy
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Endometriosis, also known as endometrial hyperplasia, is a condition in which the endometrial tissue grows outside the uterus, causing scarring,
pain, and heavy bleeding. It can often damage the fallopian tubes and ovaries in the process. A common organic cause of infertility,
endometriosis can be treated with medications such as lupron for endometriosis that lowers hormone levels and decreases endometrial growths. While
such medications often relieve associated symptoms, a patient should understand the potential side effects before pursuing this treatment regimen.
For endometrial cancer, also known as uterine cancer and more common among women after menopause, standard treatment options include hormone
therapy, radiation therapy, chemotherapy and hysterectomy (surgical removal of the uterus). Three of these — radiation therapy, chemotherapy
and hysterectomy — are also used to treat cervical cancer.
For benign (non-cancerous) conditions like menorrhagia (heavy menstrual bleeding), non-surgical treatments like hormone therapy or minimally
invasive ablative therapies may offer relief. For fibroids, uterine-preserving myomectomy – a surgical alternative to hysterectomy -- may be an option.
Hysterectomy
For most uterine conditions, if available non-surgical treatments fail to relieve symptoms, many women choose a more certain result with
elective hysterectomy. Each year in the U.S. alone, doctors perform about 600,000 hysterectomies, making it the second most common surgical procedure.1
While symptoms such as chronic pain and bleeding often point a woman and her doctor toward hysterectomy as the preferred treatment choice,
life-threatening conditions such as cancer or uncontrollable bleeding in the uterus often necessitate a hysterectomy and follow-up treatment.
While hysterectomy is relatively safe, always ask your doctor about all treatment options, as well as their risks and benefits, to determine
which approach is right for you. And if hysterectomy is recommended or required, you owe it to yourself to learn about
da Vinci® Hysterectomy, a robot-assisted, minimally invasive surgery
that for many women has potential as the safest and most effective treatment available.
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