Canada Pharmacy Shares Pill to Treat Endometriosis over Hysterectomy and Tummy Tuck

May 22
08:32

2012

Remcel Mae P. Canete

Remcel Mae P. Canete

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Recent study recommends that using two varied operations -- a hysterectomy and a tummy tuck -- is fairly safe, without significant problems evident in 65 females who had undergone both surgeries at the same time. Further, a contraceptive pill,generic Seasonique has been discovered to treat endometriosis aside from preventing ovulation.

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Recent study recommends that using two varied operations -- a hysterectomy and a tummy tuck -- is fairly safe,Canada Pharmacy Shares Pill to Treat Endometriosis over Hysterectomy and Tummy Tuck Articles without significant problems evident in 65 females who had undergone both surgeries at the same time. Further, a contraceptive pill, generic Seasonique has been discovered to treat endometriosis aside from preventing ovulation. 

"The results suggest that combined [tummy tuck] and hysterectomy is a safe and effective way to help patients attain both cosmetic and medically important outcomes in the same surgical procedure," wrote the study authors, from Florida International University in Hialeah. 

"Any procedure that carries a 32 percent complication rate should be re-evaluated," said plastic surgeon Dr. Sherrell Aston. He also disagreed with the authors' definition of what a "minor" complication is. 

"Transfusion is a major complication, and it occurred in 3 percent of the surgeries," said Aston, who also is the surgeon director and chairman of the department of plastic surgery at the Manhattan Eye, Ear and Throat Hospital in New York City. 

The bottom line, he said: "I would not recommend doing these procedures together." They should take it step by step – to buy Seasonique could be an alternative especially if they are considering family planning. 

Hysterectomies can be done through an open incision in the abdomen or through tiny incisions in the abdomen with a device called a laparoscope. It also is possible to remove the uterus through the vagina. Dr. Angela Kerr, chief of the gynecology program at the Brooklyn Hospital Center in New York City said abdominal hysterectomy is still the most common. But, she noted, the other methods are gaining in popularity. 

"In my opinion, I would want separate procedures," Aston said. 

"The surgery could be safe for some patients," Kerr said. "But it depends on patient selection: Do the patients have other conditions like diabetes or hypertension? That may play a role in the risk of complications. And a lot depends on the expertise of the surgeons." 

The study authors said, "The potential benefits of combining the surgeries included reduced overall healing time, decreased time spent in the hospital and a reduction in the risks associated with anesthesia." Further, it may require frequent visits to Canada pharmacy at the beginning but it will just get better along the way. 

A hysterectomy is the surgical removal of the uterus, usually performed by a gynecologist. Hysterectomy may be total (removing the body, fundus, and cervix of the uterus; often called "complete") or partial (removal of the uterine body while leaving the cervix intact; also called "supracervical"). It is the most commonly performed gynecological surgical procedure. In 2003, over 600,000 hysterectomies were performed in the United States alone, of which over 90% were performed for benign conditions. Such rates being highest in the industrialized world has led to the major controversy that hysterectomies are being largely performed for unwarranted and unnecessary reasons. 

Removal of the uterus renders the patient unable to bear children (as does removal of ovaries and fallopian tubes) and has surgical risks as well as long-term effects, so the surgery is normally recommended when other treatment options are not available. It is expected that the frequency of hysterectomies for non-malignant indications will fall as there are good alternatives in many cases. 

Oophorectomy (removal of ovaries) is frequently done together with hysterectomy to decrease the risk of ovarian cancer. However, recent studies have shown that prophylactic oophorectomy without an urgent medical indication decreases a woman's long-term survival rates substantially and has other serious adverse effects, particularly in terms of inducing early-onset-osteoporosis through removal of the major sources of female hormonal production. This effect is not limited to pre-menopausal women; even women who have already entered menopause were shown to have experienced a decrease in long-term survivability post-oophorectomy.