Laparoscopy in the "normal" infertile patient: a question revisited

The Journal of the American Association of Gynecologic Laparoscopists, 7(3), 317-324

DOI 10.1016/s1074-3804(05)60473-2 PMID 10924624 Source

Abstract

STUDY

Objective

To determine the prevalence of reproductive pathology in a group of infertile women thought to be at low risk for altered pelvic anatomy.

Design

Retrospective chart review and follow-up (Canadian Task Force classification II-2).

Setting

Academic-affiliated, private reproductive endocrinology practice.

Patients

One hundred infertile women.

Intervention

Diagnostic and/or therapeutic laparoscopy. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN

Results

Of 100 patients with a negative reproductive work-up up to the point of laparoscopy, 68 had pathology of reproductive

Significance

intrinsic tubal disease 24, peritubal adhesive disease 34, and endometriosis 43, some in combination. Laparoscopy was especially helpful in establishing treatment protocols for older women, who were referred for assisted reproductive techniques earlier than otherwise might have been the case. Women conceived after hormone therapy and after operative intervention. Although the hysterosalpingogram was read as normal in all women, tubal disease was diagnosed laparoscopically, independent of endometriosis, in 27 patients, with 2 having complete obstruction. Endometriosis stage I-II was found in 22 patients, stage III in 13, and stage IV in 6.

Conclusion

Even in women thought to be at low risk for significant pelvic pathology affecting reproduction, the yield was high. Although some pregnancies were achieved after operative intervention, frequently laparoscopy was helpful in making a decision to go to assisted reproductive technology, particularly when infertility had been of long duration and in older women. Frequently the degree of pathology was such that a full operating suite was necessary to provide adequate instrumentation and anesthesia for operative intervention, which would not have been the case with office laparoscopy.

Topics

diagnostic laparoscopy unexplained infertility, laparoscopy normal workup infertility, hidden pelvic pathology infertility, tubal disease normal hysterosalpingogram, endometriosis diagnosis laparoscopy infertile, peritubal adhesions infertility evaluation, laparoscopy versus assisted reproductive technology, occult tubal factor infertility, laparoscopy before ivf unexplained, reproductive surgery versus art, laparoscopic findings normal hsg

Cite this article

Corson, S. L., Cheng, A., & Gutmann, J. N. (2000). Laparoscopy in the "normal" infertile patient: a question revisited. *The Journal of the American Association of Gynecologic Laparoscopists*, *7*(3), 317-324. https://doi.org/10.1016/s1074-3804(05)60473-2

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