| Literature DB >> 29789793 |
Ahmed El-Balat1, Rudy Leon DeWilde2, Iryna Schmeil1, Morva Tahmasbi-Rad1, Sandra Bogdanyova1, Ali Fathi1, Sven Becker1.
Abstract
Myomas, also known as fibroids, are a specific characteristic of the human species. No other primates develop fibroids. At a cellular level, myomas are benign hyperplastic lesions of uterine smooth muscle cells. There are interesting theoretical concepts that link the development of myomas in humans with the highly specific process of childbirth from an upright position and the resulting need for greatly increased "expulsive" forces during labor. Myomas might be the price our species pays for our bipedal and highly intelligent existence. Myomas affect, with some variability, all ethnic groups and approximately 50% of all women during their lifetime. While some remain asymptomatic, myomas can cause significant and sometimes life-threatening uterine bleeding, pain, infertility, and, in extreme cases, ureteral obstruction and death. Traditionally, over 50% of all hysterectomies were performed for fibroids, leading to a significant healthcare burden. In this article, we review the developments of the past 20 years with regard to multiple new treatment strategies that have evolved during this time.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29789793 PMCID: PMC5896337 DOI: 10.1155/2018/4593875
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Treatment options for uterine myomas.
| (1) | Oral contraceptive pills (symptomatic control of pain/bleeding) |
| (2) | Levonorgestrel-intrauterine device (IUD) (symptomatic control of pain/bleeding) |
| (3) | Ulipristal acetate treatment |
| (4) | Myoma embolisation by interventional radiology (induced ischemic myoma necrosis and shrinkage) |
| (5) | High frequency ultrasound treatment (induced thermic myoma necrosis and shrinkage) |
| (6) | Hysteroscopic myomectomy |
| (7) | Laparoscopic/open myomectomy and uterine reconstruction |
| (8) | Laparoscopic/open/vaginal hysterectomy |
Pubmed yield of different disease-specific keywords.
| Fibroids | 22332 |
| Uterine fibroids | 22052 |
| Myoma | 5408 |
| Uterine myoma | 22051 |
| Leiomyoma | 21001 |
| Uterine leiomyoma | 21001 |
| Benign uterine tumors | 5735 |
Pubmed yield of different procedure specific keywords.
| Myoma treatment | 2611 |
| Myoma treatment randomized trial | 137 |
| Conservative myoma treatment | 121 |
| Hormonal myoma treatment | 126 |
| Surgical myoma treatment | 1599 |
| Fibroid treatment | 11555 |
| Fibroid treatment randomized trial | 487 |
| Conservative fibroid treatment | 333 |
| Hormonal fibroid treatment | 510 |
| Surgical fibroid treatment | 6724 |
Important surgical questions.
| (1) | Should hysterectomy be total or supracervical? |
| (2) | What is the upper size-limit for laparoscopic hysterectomy? |
| (3) | Should a salpingectomy always be performed during hysterectomy? |
| (4) | Is surgery safer with or without in-bag morcellation? |
| (5) | Is there an upper limit for number of fibroids in laparoscopy myomectomy? |
| (6) | Which suture technique is superior: extracorporeal or intracorporeal? |
| (7) | Is intrauterine injection of vasoconstrictive drugs necessary? |
| (8) | Should the uterine arteries be routinely clipped in laparoscopic myomectomy? |
| (9) | Should patient be pretreated with Gn-RH-analogs prior to hysteroscopic myomectomy? |
Treatment options, myoma counseling cascade.
| (1) | Diagnostic evaluation: rule out submucous fibroid or nonmyoma diagnosis |
| (2) | Do nothing: watchful waiting |
| (3) | Only treat symptoms: bleeding, pain |
| (4) | Hormonal treatment: oral contraceptive pill, focus on bleeding |
| (5) | Hormonal treatment: ulipristal acetate |
| (6) | Fibroid embolization: radiology |
| (7) | HIFU treatment: radiology |
| (8) | Laparoscopic evaluation and surgical treatment |
| (9) | Laparoscopic evaluation and hysterectomy |