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Minimally Invasive Medicine
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Minimally Invasive Medicine
www.MinimallyInvasiveMedicine.com
Minimally Invasive Medicine
What
is Minimally Invasive Medicine?
Minimally Invasive Medicine is an increasingly growing area of medicine that provides options or alternatives to radical surgery thereby minimizing healing and recovery/recuperation times and lessens blood loss. An example of minimally invasive medicine includes performing hysterectomies via the vagina, instead of opening the patients abdomen to remove the uterus.
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Recommended
Links:
Black
Box Warning
www.BlackBoxWarning.com
Coronary
Artery Bypass
www.CoronaryArteryBypass.com
Female Sexual Medicine
www.FemaleSexualMedicine.com
Feminine Hygiene
www.FeminineHygiene.com
Genitourinary
www.Genitourinary.com
Gynecologic Urology
www.GynecologicUrology.com
Menorrhagia
www.Menorrhagia.net
Menstrual Disorders
www.MenstrualDisorders.com
Obstetrics and Gynecology
www.ObstetricsAndGynecology.net
Pelvic Organ Prolapse
www.PelvicOrganProlapse.com
Pregnancy and Childbirth
www.PregnancyAndChildbirth.net
Synthetic Mesh
www.SyntheticMesh.com
Vaginal Relaxation
www.VaginalRelaxation.com
Vulvovaginal
Health
www.Vulvovaginal.com
Pelvic Organ Prolapse
www.PelvicOrganProlapse.com
Pelvic
Organ Prolapse and Pelvic
Prolapse
Information, Resources & Physician Referrals
What
is
Pelvic Organ Prolapse?
Pelvic Organ Prolapse
also referred to as Pelvic Prolapse, is a very common condition, particularly among older women. It's estimated that half of women who have children will experience some form of
Pelvic Organ Prolapse
in later life. Many women, particularly because they may no longer be sexually active, and fail to continue receiving their annual pelvic exams, don't seek help from their doctor. Therefore, the actual number of women affected by
Pelvic Organ Prolapse
is unknown.
Pelvic Organ Prolapse
is also referred to as; genital prolapse, pelvic relaxation,
pelvic prolapse, uterine prolapse, uterovaginal prolapse,
pelvic floor dysfunction, urogenital
prolapse, vaginal
relaxation or vaginal
vault prolapse.
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What is Pelvic Prolapse?
Pelvic
Prolapse is
another term used for "Pelvic
Organ Prolapse."
Pelvic
Prolapse is a very common
condition, particularly among older women. It's estimated that half of women who
have children will experience some form of Pelvic
Organ Prolapse in later
life. Many women, particularly because they may no longer be sexually active,
and fail to continue receiving their annual pelvic exams, don't seek help from
their doctor. Therefore, the actual number of women affected by Pelvic
Organ Prolapse is
unknown.
Pelvic
Prolapse may also be
called; genital prolapse, pelvic relaxation, pelvic prolapse, uterine prolapse,
uterovaginal prolapse, pelvic floor dysfunction, urogenital prolapse or vaginal
vault prolapse.
What are the symptoms that
indicate a woman is suffering from Pelvic Prolapse?
Loss of bladder control.
Loss of bowel control.
Increasing need and frequency to urinate - and then difficulty in completely emptying your bladder.
The feelings that your of pelvic or vaginal heaviness, bulging, fullness and/or pain, or a feeling that something is "dropping."
Recurrent bladder infections.
Excessive vaginal discharge.
Pain or lack of sensation during sex
But
Pelvic Organ Prolapse
is a real, common and treatable problem. Consider this:
About half of all women over age 50 suffer from some degree of Pelvic Organ Prolapse.
One in 10 women undergo surgery for Pelvic Organ Prolapse
by age 80.
What is "Colposuspension" surgery?
Age and vaginal childbirth takes it toll on women's pelvic
organs and this has lasting effects that cause a number of problems for women.
"Female Urinary
Incontinence" is one of the most problems that most women - over
50% - that delivered one or more babies vaginally, have to contend with.
Women with
female
urinary incontinence have problems relating to urine
"leakage" whenever they; strain, cough, laugh or run. This condition is also called
"stress urinary
incontinence" meaning the stress of physical activity, not emotional stress is causing her to "leak" urine.
The problems associated with female
urinary incontinence are corrected in the the "floor" of the woman's pelvis by several methods or types of surgeries - one of which is called
Colposuspension.
A woman's pelvic floor is a sheet of special muscles and ligaments that stretch across the inside of the female pelvis. Women can feel it "tighten" when they try to hold back the flow of urine - or when they strain, cough, laugh or run. The uterus and bladder are located above the pelvic floor. The vagina and the opening of the bladder (the urethra) pass through the pelvic floor. If the pelvic floor weakens, the uterus and bladder "drop" down. The control of the urine is thereby weakened.
Colposuspension
surgery strengthens the pelvic floor to lift, or "suspend" the uterus and bladder back up to their correct position within the woman's pelvis.
The word "Colposuspension"
comes from the Greek word for vagina, which is "colpos."
What is a "Suburethral
Sling"?
A "Suburethral
Sling" is a type of pelvic support that is constructed (surgically) from muscle, ligament, or
synthetic mesh
material that elevates the bladder from underneath in the treatment of stress
urinary incontinence.
What happens during Suburethral
Sling surgery?
In Suburethral
Sling surgery, the surgeon inserts a supportive strap of material (called the suburethral sling) which elevates the woman's urethra and bladder neck, and then "anchors" it to each side of her pubic bone.
A Suburethral
Sling is a medical "device" that is made from either a synthetic
mesh, or the device can be fashioned from donor tissue or the patient's own tissue, which is cut from her abdominal wall. Although it is a more invasive procedure, some patients prefer using their own tissue, because synthetic material may erode into the urinary tract and cause infection or reduce effectiveness.
Newer techniques for Suburethral
Sling insertion are minimally invasive, allowing for smaller incisions and shorter hospital stays. These techniques are "variations on the
Suburethral
Sling and they conceptually work the same way to provide a little hammock for support to the urethra.
What is a "Midurethral
Sling"?
The "Midurethral
Sling" is a minimally-invasive surgical procedure that is performed to treat women with
Stress Urinary
Incontinence.
What is a "Transobturator
Sling"?
The Transobturator Sling is another minimally-invasive surgical procedure that is performed to help women with Female Stress Urinary Incontinence.
The Transobturator Sling surgery is performed by the doctor placing a narrow strip of tape or mesh in a position that provides support for the woman's urethra. The Transobturator Sling procedure eliminates some of the potential complications that come about from other Sling type surgical procedures that blindly passes a large needle carrier through the retropubic space.
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Minimally Invasive Medicine
www.MinimallyInvasiveMedicine.com
Minimally Invasive Medicine
info@MinimallyInvasiveMedicine.com
Our
site is for education and business development purposes only.
We are not doctors and do not provide medical advice.
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