Minimally invasive gynaecological surgery.

Australian family physician · 1992 · vol. 21(6) , pp. 772–3, 777 · PMID:1535774 · W2409397099
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AI-generated summary by claude@2026-06, 2026-06-08

Laparoscopic and hysteroscopic surgeries offer patients reduced pain, shorter hospital stays, and cost savings for various gynecological conditions, though they require specialized training.

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Abstract

Most gynaecological operations can now be performed laparoscopically. The results for patients are a reduction in pain, less time spent in hospital and in convalescence and cost savings. For some procedures the risk of infection and adhesion formation is also reduced. This pelviscopic surgery requires extra training in special surgical skills to overcome the risks that include incomplete surgery resulting from poor access to a pelvic lesion or trauma to organs as a result of poor technique. Most patients with ectopic pregnancy, pelvic adhesions, endometriosis, ovarian cysts and fibromyomata can be treated by this advanced laparoscopic surgery. Hysteroscopic endometrial resection can replace hysterectomy for most patients with menorrhagia who have a normal size uterus.

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Condition tags

endometriosis

MeSH descriptors

Genital Diseases, Female Genitalia, Female Laparoscopy Laparoscopy Female Genital Diseases, Female Genitalia, Female Humans Hysterectomy, Vaginal Hysterectomy, Vaginal Pregnancy Pregnancy, Ectopic Pregnancy, Ectopic

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