Fibroid Surgery Risks – Citizens Report https://citizensreport.org a digital channel commited to health & medical rights. Wed, 17 Jan 2024 09:06:12 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.24 https://citizensreport.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/cropped-cr-icon-1-32x32.png Fibroid Surgery Risks – Citizens Report https://citizensreport.org 32 32 Fibroid Surgery Cancer and Tumors https://citizensreport.org/2015/02/05/fibroid-surgery-cancer-tumors/ https://citizensreport.org/2015/02/05/fibroid-surgery-cancer-tumors/#respond Thu, 05 Feb 2015 06:19:04 +0000 http://www.citizensreport.org/?p=4631 “Tumor” is a word that a patient never wants to hear come from their doctor’s mouth. But what is a fibroid tumor? The idea may sound a bit frightening. But fear not, because a fibroid tumor is much less terrifying than one would think. In fact, the tumor itself is less dangerous than the procedures […]

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“Tumor” is a word that a patient never wants to hear come from their doctor’s mouth. But what is a fibroid tumor? The idea may sound a bit frightening. But fear not, because a fibroid tumor is much less terrifying than one would think. In fact, the tumor itself is less dangerous than the procedures used to treat it.

A fibroid tumor is a group of fibrous muscle tissue that comes together to form a knot, or an area of density, inside a woman’s uterus. Fibroid tumors often affect women between the ages of 30 and 40. There are few symptoms associated with fibroid tumors, and for the most part, they leave patients with little adverse effect. The only real symptom that has been associated with fibroid tumors is heavy menstrual periods and increased bleeding.

“There is virtually no threat of malignancy—and there are a number of excellent treatment options, as well as the option to do nothing at all—so there really is no reason to worry,” Steve Goldstein, MD, professor of gyncelogy and obstretics at NYU Medical Center, said in an article from WebMD.

Fibroid Removal Cancer

While few symptoms are associated with the condition, many surgeries are still being performed on patients with fibroid tumors, causing fibroid removal cancer. Many women are being led to believe that a hysterectomy or a laparoscopic fibroid surgery are the only fibroid tumor surgery options.

This is not the case.

Many of these surgeries are being done without the proper needs for surgery being met, highlighting the fibroid surgery risks. These women could live with the fibroid tumor and deal with little to no medical complications. Fibroid surgery cancer is one such risk associated with the surgery. The fibroid tumor surgery recovery time can also be quite lengthy and fibroid surgery cost can be enormously high. Fibroid surgery and pregnancy can also lead to adverse birth defects and complications during birth.

There are many options other than surgery for treating fibroid tumors. It is important to talk with your doctor and see if there may be other alternatives for treatment. When considering surgery, one must realize that the procedures used to treat the fibroids tumor could cause more adverse effects than the tumor itself.

Side Effect Victims

Women who developed Uterine Cancer, Stomach Cancer or Leiomyosarcoma (LMS) after undergoing Fibroid Removal or a Hysterectomy may be eligible for compensation. Friends of our’s are happy to help you. Don’t let your valuable legal rights expire – request a free case review by visiting:

Click here to receive your free case evaluation.

Featured photo courtesy of: Fibroid Natural Treatment

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Side Effects of Uterus Fibroids Surgery https://citizensreport.org/2015/01/14/uterus-fibroids-surgery-side-effects/ https://citizensreport.org/2015/01/14/uterus-fibroids-surgery-side-effects/#respond Wed, 14 Jan 2015 09:52:07 +0000 http://www.citizensreport.org/?p=4402 Uterus Fibroids Surgery Side Effects Although generally quite safe, uterus fibroids surgery side effects include excessive bleeding, pelvic pain, discomfort during sex, infection and abscess. Bleeding can persist for weeks or even months after an abdominal surgery such as a myomectomy – which removes the fibroids themselves – or even longer in the case of […]

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Uterus Fibroids Surgery Side Effects

Uterus Fibroids Surgery Side Effects

Although generally quite safe, uterus fibroids surgery side effects include excessive bleeding, pelvic pain, discomfort during sex, infection and abscess. Bleeding can persist for weeks or even months after an abdominal surgery such as a myomectomy – which removes the fibroids themselves – or even longer in the case of a hysterectomy – which removes the uterus entirely. A full recovery from a hysterectomy can take up to a year and can be accompanied by heavy bleeding. For premenopausal women who intend to have children, the most serious uterus fibroids surgery side effect is infertility. Loss of fertility can occur even after a successful myomectomy. Complications during a myomectomy, such as uncontrollable blood loss, can make a total hysterectomy necessary.

The risks and long recovery times associated with abdominal fibroid removal surgery led to the development of the less invasive laparoscopic technique, although this option is not suited for all women. Laparoscopic surgery removes fibroids using a long, thin tube called a laparoscope, inserted into the uterus either through small incisions in the abdomen or via the vagina. Not all uterus fibroids can be treated by laparoscopy; however, a hysterectomy may be necessary depending on the size and location of the fibroids.

Hormone therapy can shrink fibroids enough to make a myomectomy feasible and thereby preserve fertility.

Uterus Fibroids Surgery Cancer

The many uterus fibroid surgery side effects led to the development of new procedures that were billed as safer and faster. However, the FDA has sounded the alarm about the dangers of uterus fibroid surgery cancer posed by a new fibroid removal technique.

Laparoscopic power morcellation has the potential to unleash dormant cancer cells present in fibroids. According to an FDA study, about 1 in 350 women who undergo this fibroid surgery risk developing a leiomyosarcoma, which is a cancer of smooth muscle tissue that can spread throughout the body. Once spread, most leiomyosarcomas are inoperable and fatal.

It is clear that this type of fibroid surgery risks cancer. Some doctors and hospitals have already stopped using laparoscopic power morcellation, and patients who developed cancer as a uterus fibroid surgery side effect after undergoing this procedure are preparing lawsuits against the manufacturers of the devices used.

Side Effect Victims

Women who developed Uterine Cancer, Stomach Cancer or Leiomyosarcoma (LMS) after undergoing Fibroid Removal or a Hysterectomy may be eligible for compensation. Don’t let your valuable legal rights expire – request a free case review by visiting:

Click here to receive your free case evaluation.

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Common Fibroids Surgery Risks and Side Effects https://citizensreport.org/2014/12/22/uterine-fibroids-surgery-side-effects/ https://citizensreport.org/2014/12/22/uterine-fibroids-surgery-side-effects/#respond Mon, 22 Dec 2014 07:14:16 +0000 http://www.citizensreport.org/?p=4205 Uterine Fibroids Surgery Side Effects There are two kinds of fibroid removal surgery, myomectomies and hysterectomies, and there are two of each, abdominal and laparoscopic. A myomectomy removes only the fibroids themselves, while a hysterectomy removes the uterus. Abdominal surgeries require incisions into the abdomen and the uterus itself. Laparoscopic procedures make only small incisions, […]

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Uterine Fibroids Surgery Side Effects

There are two kinds of fibroid removal surgery, myomectomies and hysterectomies, and there are two of each, abdominal and laparoscopic. A myomectomy removes only the fibroids themselves, while a hysterectomy removes the uterus. Abdominal surgeries require incisions into the abdomen and the uterus itself. Laparoscopic procedures make only small incisions, and the internal surgery is done by laparoscope, not by hand.

For women who hope to have children, a myomectomy is the only viable surgical option. Even so, most forms of myomectomy will scar and weaken the uterine wall, and there is always a risk that this damage will render pregnancy impossible. Infertility is thus a possible uterine fibroids surgery side effects, even from procedures that aim to preserve reproductive capability. Any kind of fibroid removal surgery increases the risks of complications during pregnancy and birth, and scarring on the uterine wall will sometimes make a cesarean section necessary to avoid the danger of rupturing the uterus during delivery. There is also the risk that excessive bleeding and blood loss during a surgical myomectomy will mandate a full hysterectomy. While this chance is small, it should be carefully considered by women who intend to have children.

Uterine fibroid surgery side effects include long recovery times, nausea, fever, fatigue and other postmenopausal symptoms. Recovery from a hysterectomy can take a year or even more, while most patients recover from a myomectomy within weeks or months. Abdominal procedures have longer recovery times and will leave visible scarring. Laparoscopic procedures generally have shorter operating and recovery times because the incisions are much smaller. The body’s production of estrogen typically decreases after the procedure, leading to some temporary symptoms of menopause. Some women prematurely enter menopause after fibroid removal surgery, although the chance of this happening is slight.

The Danger of Laparoscopic Power Morcellation:

Fibroid Removal Surgery Cancer

With all the potential uterine fibroids surgery side effects, patients, doctors and surgeons have been looking for alternative procedures that cost less, pose fewer risks and preserve fertility. Laparoscopic power morcellation is a laparoscopic myomectomy – meaning it involves no major incisions – that has become increasingly common, recommended by doctors as a simpler, cheaper option for fibroid removal. A laparoscope is inserted into the uterus via a small incision and is directed by the surgeon from the outside. The laparoscope is equipped with a “morcellator” that shreds and destroy the fibroid tissue.

The FDA recently revealed that laparoscopic power morcellation is known to increase patients’ risk of cancer significantly. The procedure itself is not carcinogenic, but latent cancers present in the fibroid or surrounding tissue on the uterine wall may be released and become malignant. About 1 in 350 women have a type of uterine cancer called uterine sarcoma, and which which can be released into the uterus and the bloodstream as a result of morcellating the tissue. The FDA has since strengthened its initial warning about laparoscopic power morcellation, although it has yet to issue a complete ban. Some hospitals have voluntarily banned the procedure. It isn’t yet known how many women have developed fibroid removal surgery cancer as a result of laparoscopic power morcellation. Women who have undergone the procedure should get tested for presence of uterine cancer. Women who developed uterine cancer after after laparoscopic morcellation may be entitled to compensation and should consult a lawyer using the link below.

Click here to receive your free case evaluation.

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