Laparoscopic examination of the normal infertile woman

Obstetrics and Gynecology, 62(5), 642-643

Source

Abstract

It is generally accepted that laparoscopy should be performed if a woman's basic infertility evaluation reveals no abnormalities. Although it has been shown that a significant number of these patients have unsuspected pelvic pathology that can be detected by laparoscopy, there is concern about the real benefit of this procedure, ie, does the laparoscopic examination truly lead to more pregnancies than otherwise expected? Presented is a review of a series of 50 female patients whose basic infertility evaluation had failed to reveal any abnormalities. Laparoscopy revealed significant pelvic pathology in 28 cases; of the 16 who had appropriate therapy, eight became pregnant.

Topics

laparoscopy unexplained infertility normal evaluation pelvic pathology, diagnostic laparoscopy infertile women unsuspected disease, laparoscopic examination normal infertility workup pregnancy outcome, occult pelvic pathology infertility laparoscopy detection, basic infertility evaluation normal results laparoscopy benefit, Wood GP laparoscopy infertile women 1983, hidden pelvic disease infertility diagnostic surgery, laparoscopy fertility treatment pregnancy rate outcomes, unexplained female infertility surgical diagnosis value, infertility workup negative laparoscopy pelvic adhesions endometriosis

Cite this article

Wood, G. P. (1983). Laparoscopic examination of the normal infertile woman. *Obstetrics and gynecology*, *62*(5), 642-643.

Related articles