OBJECTIVE: To compare the acceptance and tolerability of the mini-pan-endoscopic approach (transvaginal hydrolaparoscopy [THL] combined with minihysteroscopy) versus hysterosalpingography (HSG) for evaluating tubal patency and the uterine cavity in an outpatient infertility investigation. DESIGN: Randomized controlled study. SETTING:University hospital. PATIENT(S): Twenty-three infertile patients without obvious pelvic pathology. INTERVENTION(S): Women were randomly divided into two groups. One group underwent minihysteroscopy and THL with tube chromoperturbation as first investigation and HSG within the following 7 days, while in the other group the investigation sequence was inverted. Women reported pain experienced before and at the end of procedures. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Mean duration of procedures, level of pain experienced, diagnostic agreement about tubal patency and uterine cavity normality. RESULT(S): THL and minihysteroscopy took significantly more time but was significantly less painful than HSG. Regarding tubal patency, in 95.5% of cases THL agreed with HSG. In one case, HSG diagnosed a bilateral obstruction of tubes, whereas at THL a bilateral spreading of methylene blue was seen. Agreement on intrauterine pathologies between minihysteroscopy and HSG was poor (43%); the number of intrauterine abnormalities found at hysteroscopy was significantly greater than at HSG. CONCLUSION(S): THL in association with minihysteroscopy provided more information and was better tolerated than HSG in an outpatient infertility investigation.
RCT Entities:
OBJECTIVE: To compare the acceptance and tolerability of the mini-pan-endoscopic approach (transvaginal hydrolaparoscopy [THL] combined with minihysteroscopy) versus hysterosalpingography (HSG) for evaluating tubal patency and the uterine cavity in an outpatientinfertility investigation. DESIGN: Randomized controlled study. SETTING: University hospital. PATIENT(S): Twenty-three infertilepatients without obvious pelvic pathology. INTERVENTION(S): Women were randomly divided into two groups. One group underwent minihysteroscopy and THL with tube chromoperturbation as first investigation and HSG within the following 7 days, while in the other group the investigation sequence was inverted. Women reported pain experienced before and at the end of procedures. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Mean duration of procedures, level of pain experienced, diagnostic agreement about tubal patency and uterine cavity normality. RESULT(S): THL and minihysteroscopy took significantly more time but was significantly less painful than HSG. Regarding tubal patency, in 95.5% of cases THL agreed with HSG. In one case, HSG diagnosed a bilateral obstruction of tubes, whereas at THL a bilateral spreading of methylene blue was seen. Agreement on intrauterine pathologies between minihysteroscopy and HSG was poor (43%); the number of intrauterine abnormalities found at hysteroscopy was significantly greater than at HSG. CONCLUSION(S): THL in association with minihysteroscopy provided more information and was better tolerated than HSG in an outpatientinfertility investigation.
Authors: Sheetal Nijhawan; Juan S Barajas-Gamboa; Saniea Majid; Garth R Jacobsen; Michael F Sedrak; Bryan J Sandler; Mark A Talamini; Santiago Horgan Journal: Surg Endosc Date: 2012-07-18 Impact factor: 4.584