Missed abortions are a common occurrence and represent a heavy gynaecological emergency workload to both medical and nursing staff. The conventional method using vacuum aspiration of uterus is associated with morbidity and mortality. Medical termination of pregnancy is accepted as a safe and effective alternative method. However, medical evacuation of uterus in missed abortions had not been fully investigated. In this study we hope to examine the efficacy of medical methods for terminating missed abortions. Mifepristone and misoprostol prescribed to 100 women with an ultrasonically confirmed missed abortion was compared with 100 women who had surgical evacuation under general anaesthesia for their missed abortion. The disparity in complications between medical and surgical groups was not significantly different (Student's t-test, P=0.5). This study showed medical evacuation of missed abortion to be an effective, safe and cost-effective, alternative to surgical evacuation of the uterus and is particularly suited to women not wanting hospital admission or a surgical procedure under general anaesthesia. It represents an option of management that can be less intrusive and gives the woman some control but is both safe and effective.
The ratio of vaginal hysterectomy to abdominal hysterectomy in the UK is 1:3. It is well known that patients who have had a vaginal hysterectomy recover better compared with abdominal hysterectomy. However, abdominal hysterectomy is the preferred method in most hospitals because it is deemed easier to do. With ERBE Biclamp diathermy forceps, vaginal hysterectomy could be safely and easily performed by gynaecologists. This study showed a different surgical technique for performing vaginal hysterectomy. It allowed easier and safer operations in patients with large uterus, fibroid uterus, where there was no uterine descent and narrow introitus. Also it allowed the adnexal appendages to be removed easily by the vaginal route. We compared 100 patients who had a vaginal hysterectomy performed using this method, with patients who had a vaginal hysterectomy performed by the conventional method using sutures. We found that we could safely perform vaginal hysterectomy with greater ease. Also, the need for postoperative analgesia was less and the patients were discharged earlier. Consequently, the patients' convalescence period was shorter and better.
This study showed the efficacy of large loop excision of the transformation zone (LLETZ) in the management of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN). Eighty-three women with abnormal cervical cytology were recruited. Colposcopic examination and directed punch biopsy were performed and the women had LLETZ therapy as an outpatient procedure. There were 2 cases of microinvasive cervical carcinoma that were missed by directed punch biopsy, the diagnosis being made after the patients underwent LLETZ treatment. There was a large disparity in the histological analysis between directed punch biopsy and LLETZ specimen. This disparity would not have been detected if the women were treated by ablative methods. In women with cervical dysplasia, LLETZ procedure is preferred as the whole excised lesion can be examined histologically and diagnostic error is reduced.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.