| Literature DB >> 29693017 |
V Tanos1,2,3, K E Berry4, M Frist4, R Campo5,6,7, R L DeWilde5,8.
Abstract
Myomectomy aims to preserve fertility, treat abnormal uterine bleeding, and alleviate pain. It should cause minimal damage to the endometrium, while being tolerable and durable, and reduce the incidence of myoma recurrence and complications including bleeding, hematoma, adhesions, and gravid uterus perforation. Training and experience are crucial to reduce complications. The surgical strategy depends on imaging information on the myomas. The position of the optical and secondary ports will determine the degree of ergonomic surgery performance, time and difficulty of myoma enucleation, and the suturing quality. Appropriate hysterotomy length relative to myoma size can decrease bleeding, coagulation, and suturing times. Bipolar coagulation of large vessels, while avoiding carbonization and myometrium gaps after suturing, may decrease the risk of myometrial hematoma. Quality surgery and the use of antiadhesive barriers may reduce the risk of postoperative adhesions. Slow rotation of the beveled morcellator and good control of the bag could reduce de novo myoma and endometriosis. Low intra-abdominal CO2 pressure may reduce the risk of benign and malignant cell dissemination. The benefits a patient gains from laparoscopic myomectomy are greater than the complication risks of laparoscopic morcellation. Recent publications on laparoscopic myomectomies demonstrate reduced hospitalization stays, postoperative pain, blood loss, and recovery compared to open surgery.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29693017 PMCID: PMC5859837 DOI: 10.1155/2018/8250952
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Comparison of hysterotomy scar hematoma after laparoscopic myomectomy.
| Study | Patients | Myoma number | Myoma mean size cm | Operation average time min | Blood loss | Blood transfusion | US Hysterotomy scar hematoma |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sinha et al., 2003 [ | 51 | 78 | >9 | 137 | 323 ml | 1 (1.3%) | 1 (1.3%) |
| Altgassen et al., 2006 [ | 351 | 654 | 5.3 | 113 | ND | 1 | (29.2%) |
| Sizzi et al., 2007 [ | 2050 | ND | 6.4 | ND | 14 (0.68%) hemorrhage | 3 (0.14%) | 10 (0.48%) |
| Sinha et al., 2008 [ | 505 | 912 | 5.9 | 60 | 90 ml | ND | ND |
| Mettler et al., 2012 [ | 335 | 480 | 4–9 | 90 | 157 ml | 0 | 21 (6.2%) |
Note. ND: no data.
Intraoperative bleeding during laparoscopic myomectomy without any vasoconstrive measures.
| Study | Myoma type | Patients number | Myoma size cm | Myoma multiple | Bleeding ml | Hospitalization | Conversion to LMY |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sizzi et al., 2007 [ | ND | 2050 | >4 | 48 | ND | ND | 0.34 |
| Tinelli et al., 2012 [ | SS + IM | 235 | 4–10 | 48 | 118 +/− 28 | 86% 48 hs | 0 |
| Malzoni et al., 2006 [ | IM -75% | 982 | 6.7 +/− 2.7 | 47 | 3/982 | ND | 1.29 |
| Sankaran and Odejinmi, 2013 [ | ND | 125 | 7.6 | 3.7 | ND | ND | 1.6 |
| Dubuisson et al., 1995 [ | IM | 71 | >5 | ND | ND | ND | 2.7 |
| Saccardi et al., 2014 [ | ND | 444 | 8–12 | ND | 2/444 | ND | 1.35 |
| Walid and Heaton, 2011 [ | ND | 41 | 2–15.6 | ND | 2–1200 ml | ND | ND |
| Mallick and Odejinmi, 2017 [ | IM 49% | 323 | 7.7 +/− 2.8 | 4 +/− 3.6 | 279 +/− 221 | 1.9 +/− 0.95 days | 0.62 |
| diZerega, 1997 [ | IM 34% | 54 | >3 | ND | 84 | 2.09 days | 1.8 |
| Mathew et al., 2013 [ | ND | 1,001 | ND | 44 | 248 mL avg, 1 transf | 1–5 | 1 death pop unexp |
Note. ND: no data.
De novo myoma and endometriosis formation after laparoscopic myomectomy/hysterectomy.
| Study | Type of study | Study details | Parasitic myoma% | Parasitic endometriosis% |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tanos et al., 2016 [ | EGSE Survey | 191 doctors participated | 0.08 | 0.16 |
| Meulen et al., 2016 [ | Meta-analysis | Laparoscopic morcellation and myomectomy | 0.12–0.95 | ND |
| Schuster et al., 2012 [ | Case control | 277 LASH morcellations, 187 VH or TAH | ND | 1.4 |
| Donnez et al., 2007 [ | Retrospective | 8 out of 1405 LASH cases | ND | 0.65 |
Note. ND: no data, LASH: laparoscopically assisted subtotal hysterectomy, VH: vaginal hysterectomy, and TAH: total abdominal hysterectomy.