A hysterectomy is surgery to remove a woman's uterus or womb. The uterus is the place where a baby grows when a woman is pregnant. After a hysterectomy, you no longer have menstrual periods and can't become pregnant. Sometimes the surgery also removes the ovaries and fallopian tubes
In a myomectomy, your surgeon removes the fibroids, leaving the uterus in place. If the fibroids are few in number, you and your doctor may opt for a laparoscopic or robotic procedure, which uses slender instruments inserted through small incisions in your abdomen to remove the fibroids from your uterus.
A solid or fluid-filled sac or pocket (cyst) within or on the surface of an ovary.
Ovarian cysts usually disappear in a few months but can cause complications if they don't.
Most ovarian cysts don't cause symptoms. In some cases, menstrual irregularities, pain during intercourse or irregular bowel movements can occur.
Many cysts go away on their own. If not, treatments are contraceptive pills or surgery.
A disorder in which tissue that normally lines the uterus grows outside the uterus.
With endometriosis, the tissue can be found on the ovaries, fallopian tubes or the intestines.
The most common symptoms are pain and menstrual irregularities.
Effective treatments, such as hormones and excision surgery, are available
Types of Surgery for Gynecologic Cancers:
Removal of the uterus, including the cervix. Removal of the uterus, cervix, and part of the vagina; the ovaries, fallopian tubes, or nearby lymph nodes may also be removed. Removal of one ovary and one fallopian tube. Removal of both ovaries and both fallopian tubes.
Conservative management of your ectopic pregnancy means we wait for the pregnancy to stop developing naturally, without any medical or surgical intervention.
A medical abortion, also known as medication abortion, occurs when medically-prescribed drugs are used to bring about an abortion.
Through Pills/Surgical