from
the book How to Have a Baby: Overcoming Infertility
by Dr. Aniruddha Malpani, MD and Dr. Anjali Malpani,
MD.
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Ultrasound - Seeing with Sound (Page 1)
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-- The Kinder Cut
Table of Contents
What
recent advances have occurred in ultrasound ?
How
can ultrasound guided procedures be used to treat
infertility ?
What recent
advances have occurred in ultrasound ?
Ultrasound technology has made dramatic advances in
recent years, and now tests have been described which
allow the doctor to use ultrasound to assess tubal patency.
Basically, these involve passing a fluid into your tubes
through the uterus; and the gynecologist can see the
passage of the bubbles into the tubes and out into the
abdomen. Since this test ( sonosalpingography) can be
done in the doctor's clinic itself, and does not involve
X-ray radiation, it has advantages - especially for
documenting that the tubes are normal. However, the
gold standard for tubal testing remains HSG
( hysterosalpingography, an X-ray of the uterus and
tubes) and laparoscopy today, because it provides us
with a "hard copy" image which can be critically examined.
Doppler: The newer ultrasound machines
have Doppler attachments which allow the doctor to judge
the flow of blood in the blood vessels. Colour Doppler
allows the doctor to "see " the blood flow in the pelvic
blood vessels, mapped in color on the monitor. While
still a research tool, it may provide important information
for assessing the infertile patient in the coming years.
Three – dimensional ultrasound. Using
sophisticated microprocessors, the newest ultrasound
machines allow the doctor to reconstruct the image,
so that he gets a three dimensional view. While this
provides excellent pictures, the true value of this
technique for infertility still has to be evaluated.
It can be useful in assessing women with uterine anomalies,
because it helps the doctor to differentiate between
a septate uterus and a bicornuate uterus.
How
can ultrasound guided procedures be used to treat
infertility ?
Ultrasound now also offers infertile
patients newer treatment options not available before.
Modern surgical techniques have progressively become
less and less invasive - all to the patient's benefit
! From laparotomy to laparoscopy , and now to ultrasound
guided procedures, we are witnessing a change in the
gynecologist's armamentarium from the knife to the endoscope
to the guided needle !
The benefits to the patient of "minimally
invasive surgery" are many and include : reduced costs;
reduced hospitalisation ; reduced risk of complications;
and better preservation of fertility, with increased
chance of conception for the future.
Ultrasound-guided procedures can be
used to treat a variety of problems seen in the infertile
woman:
- Egg pickup for IVF - The use
of vaginal ultrasound for egg pickup has made egg
retrieval a short, simple and inexpensive procedure,
which can be performed in a day-care unit, under sedation
and local anesthesia . The ovaries are normally present
in the pouch of Douglas, and are very accessible transvaginally.
Moreover, the presence of adhesions does not interfere
with egg collection.
- Ovarian cyst aspiration. An
ovarian cyst is a very common condition in which fluid
collects in the ovary. However, cysts which are more
than 5 cm in size need to be treated, as they can
cause problems ( eg twisting and rupture). Normally,
surgery had to be done to remove these cysts - and
often this damaged the surrounding normal ovary as
well. With ultrasound-guidance, we can stick a needle
from the vagina into the cyst, and empty the contents
( usually clear fluid ) by sucking it out. This empties
the cyst, which often does not recur.
- Treatment of ectopic pregnancy
. With technological advances ( ultrasound and beta-HCG
blood tests) the diagnosis of tubal pregnancy can
be made very early, usually before rupture. It can
be treated by injecting a toxic chemical, methotrexate,
into the sac, which causes the tissue to die and then
get reabsorbed, without any surgery whatsoever. In
more advanced tubal pregnancies, potassium chloride
can be injected direct into the heart of the baby
in the ectopic gestational sac, thus killing it and
preventing it from growing.
- Ultrasound-guided tubal embryo
and gamete transfer for IVF and GIFT techniques. Techniques
have been devised to pass a special tube - the Jansen-Anderson
catheter set - into the fallopian tubes through the
vagina under ultrasound guidance, so as to place the
embryos and /or the gametes in the fallopian tube.
Since the tube offers a better environment for the
gametes and embryos than the uterine cavity, it is
believed that this will improve pregnancy rates.
- Tubal recanalisation for cornual
blocks (proximal tubal obstruction). Often cornual
blocks are due to the presence of mucus plugs and
amorphous debris in the tubal lumen. Ultrasound guided
tubal catheterization can effectively treat the blocked
tubes in some of these patients.
The scope of ultrasound guided
procedures has increased dramatically in the last few
years; and with further improvements in technology,
we can expect this list to become even longer, and doctors
become more versatile with using this technology.
Next page: Laparoscopy
-- The Kinder Cut
Previous page:
Ultrasound - Seeing with Sound (Page 1)
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