Endoscopic carbon dioxide laser ovarian wedge resection in resistant polycystic ovarian disease

  • Isfahan Fertility and Infertility Center ROR

International journal of fertility, 37(5), 295-299

PMID 1358842 Source

Abstract

Clomiphene citrate therapy has been found to improve the infertility rate in women suffering from polycystic ovarian disease (PCOD). However, there still exists a group of women with PCOD who fail to respond to clomiphene citrate or human menopausal gonadotropin/human chorionic gonadotropin or urofollitropin/chorionic gonadotropin treatment, an ovarian wedge resection by laparotomy approach which has been known for 50 years. Within the last decade, translaparoscopic electrocautery and laser drilling techniques have been utilized. In 1986, a translaparoscopic carbon dioxide laser ovarian wedge resection was introduced for resistant PCOD. This paper describes the surgical principle of a translaparoscopic carbon dioxide laser ovarian wedge resection. This type of treatment results in a 75% crude conception rate, with a 67% rate of healthy live birth. There was an 8% postsurgical adhesion rate among 12 cases that were incorporated into the study. This mode of therapy may prove to be very useful, safe, easy to perform, and cost effective as a second-line therapy for resistant PCOD in cases where medical inductions fail to achieve ovulation.

Topics

laparoscopic ovarian wedge resection PCOD, CO2 laser ovarian surgery polycystic ovarian disease, clomiphene resistant PCOS surgical treatment, endoscopic carbon dioxide laser ovarian drilling, polycystic ovary disease surgical conception rates, laparoscopic ovarian surgery adhesion rates, resistant PCOD second-line therapy laser resection, ovarian wedge resection fertility outcomes infertility, Ostrzenski laser ovarian wedge resection technique, translaparoscopic ovarian surgery clomiphene failure
PMID 1358842 1358842

Cite this article

Ostrzenski, A. (1992). Endoscopic carbon dioxide laser ovarian wedge resection in resistant polycystic ovarian disease. *International journal of fertility*, *37*(5), 295-299.

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