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Treatment of female infertility due to tubal obstruction by operative laparoscopy.

The advent in recent years of safe endocoagulation (thermocoagulation within the abdomen) has permitted operative laparoscopic treatment of the tubal factor in infertility in selected cases. This paper reviews the results of operative laparoscopy in 223 cases treated for infertility between 1971 and 1976. Tubal occlusion was present in 133 patients before surgical intervention. Following operative laparoscopy, tubal patency was demonstrated in 67% on testing at the time of operation and in 12% at the first postoperative hydrotubation. In only 21% of cases was tubal patency not achieved by these methods. Those cases requiring isthmic salpingostomy, ampullary or isthmic-tubal implantation, or end-to-end anastomosis were further treated by laparotomy and microsurgery. Ninety cases of pelvic endometriosis were treated by a combination treatment of thermocoagulation, ovarian cyst resection, and the antigonadotropin agent, danazol. Ovariolysis, salpingolysis, fimbrioplasty, and salpingostomy can easily be performed using operative laparoscopy as the method of choice with a minimum of complications, shortened hospitalization time (2 days), and the potential for a repeat procedure or a follow-up laparotomy should this be necessary. The pregnancy rate following laparoscopic treatment for the correction of distal tubal occlusion was 30.5% and for endometriosis genitalis externa, 40%. These rates compare favorably with the rates following procedures involving laparotomy and microsurgery for correction of similar lesions.

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