Role of diagnostic hysterolaparoscopy in the evaluation of infertility

In: International Journal of Reproduction, Contraception, Obstetrics and Gynecology · 2016 · pp. 437–440 · doi:10.18203/2320-1770.ijrcog20160385 · W2266239347
article OA: diamond CC0 ⤵ 4 in-corpus citations
AI-generated summary by claude@2026-06, 2026-06-08

Diagnostic hysterolaparoscopy identified significant tubo-peritoneal and intrauterine pathologies in 26% of infertile patients, including endometriosis, adnexal adhesions, and intrauterine septum, which were often missed by other imaging methods.

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This prospective hospital-based study evaluated the diagnostic yield of combined diagnostic hysterolaparoscopy in 300 women aged 20–40 years with a normal hormone profile and without male factor infertility across two tertiary care centers over 2 years. Laparoscopy identified abnormalities in 35% and hysteroscopy in 17%, and combined hysterolaparoscopy detected abnormalities in 26% of patients overall, with endometriosis (14%) and adnexal adhesions (12%) reported as common laparoscopic findings, and an intrauterine septum as the most common hysteroscopic finding. The paper notes that hysterolaparoscopy can identify certain tubo-peritoneal and intrauterine pathologies that are missed by other imaging modalities, implying a limitation of those modalities rather than quantifying hysterolaparoscopy’s own accuracy versus a reference standard. This paper centrally includes endometriosis as a key laparoscopic abnormality detected by diagnostic hysterolaparoscopy in infertile women, making it directly relevant to endometriosis.

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Abstract

Background: Infertility has become nowadays not only a medical, but a social problem as well. None of the laboratory findings alone is conclusive in diagnosing infertility. Diagnostic hysterolaparoscopy is an accurate method of assessing and treating infertility. Direct visualization of abdominal and pelvic organs in hysteroscopy and laparoscopy allows a definite diagnosis where clinical examination and less invasive techniques such as ultrasound, SSG and HSG fail to identify the problem. The main objective of study was to determine the role of diagnostic hysterolaparoscopy in the evaluation of infertility in tertiary care centers.Methods: A prospective hospital based study was carried out in two tertiary care centers (Sheth V.S. General Hospital and Smt. S.C.L. Municipal Hospital) over a period of 2 years from July 2013 to June 2015. Hysterolaparoscopy was done in 300 patients. Women aged 20-40 years with normal hormone profile without male factor infertility were included.Results: Out of 300 cases, 206 (69%) patients had primary infertility. While laparoscopy detected abnormalities in 35% of the cases, significant hysteroscopy findings were noted in 17% of cases. Together, diagnostic hysterolaparoscopy detected abnormalities in 26% of the infertile patients in both groups. While the most common laparoscopic abnormality was endometriosis (14%) and adnexal adhesions (12%) in primary and secondary infertile patients respectively, on hysteroscopy, intrauterine septum was found as the commonest abnormality in both the groups.Conclusions: Hysterolaparoscopy is an effective diagnostic tool for evaluation of certain significant and correctable tubo-peritoneal and intrauterine pathologies like peritoneal endometriosis, adnexal adhesions and subseptate uterus, which are usually missed by other imaging modalities.
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Background

Infertility has become nowadays not only a medical, but a social problem as well. None of the laboratory findings alone is conclusive in diagnosing infertility. Diagnostic hysterolaparoscopy is an accurate method of assessing and treating infertility. Direct visualization of abdominal and pelvic organs in hysteroscopy and laparoscopy allows a definite diagnosis where clinical examination and less invasive techniques such as ultrasound, SSG and HSG fail to identify the problem. The main objective of study was to determine the role of diagnostic hysterolaparoscopy in the evaluation of infertility in tertiary care centers.

Methods

A prospective hospital based study was carried out in two tertiary care centers (Sheth V.S. General Hospital and Smt. S.C.L. Municipal Hospital) over a period of 2 years from July 2013 to June 2015. Hysterolaparoscopy was done in 300 patients. Women aged 20-40 years with normal hormone profile without male factor infertility were included.

Results

Out of 300 cases, 206 (69%) patients had primary infertility. While laparoscopy detected abnormalities in 35% of the cases, significant hysteroscopy findings were noted in 17% of cases. Together, diagnostic hysterolaparoscopy detected abnormalities in 26% of the infertile patients in both groups. While the most common laparoscopic abnormality was endometriosis (14%) and adnexal adhesions (12%) in primary and secondary infertile patients respectively, on hysteroscopy, intrauterine septum was found as the commonest abnormality in both the groups.

Conclusions

Hysterolaparoscopy is an effective diagnostic tool for evaluation of certain significant and correctable tubo-peritoneal and intrauterine pathologies like peritoneal endometriosis, adnexal adhesions and subseptate uterus, which are usually missed by other imaging modalities. Metrics

References

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