Endometriosis Clinical Trial
Official title:
ABC Technique as a Novel Approach for Endometriosis Surgery
Endometriosis is a chronic disease defined as the existence of endometrium like lesions outside of the uterine cavity. The diagnosis is based on examination of lesions under the microscope and capturing endometrial gland and stroma. The mostly used surgical technique to diagnose and treat endometriosis is laparoscopic surgery. In our novel technique for endometriosis surgery, we used methylene blue for its natural blue color to make endometriotic lesions more visible and to filter red, yellow and white colors reflecting from the peritoneal surface.
Endometriosis is a chronic disease defined as existence of endometrium like lesions outside
of the uterine cavity. The diagnosis is based on examination of lesions under microscope and
capturing endometrial gland and stroma. The prevalence of endometriosis upon women on their
reproductive ages, all over the world is at least 10%. This prevalence depends on surgically
proven lesions that are excised, according to the this the real prevalence is still unknown
because of underdiagnosis and being unable to capture endometriotic lesions.
Endometriosis is usually described as having three subtypes, which are peritoneal, ovarian
endometriomas and deep infiltrative endometriosis (DIE). Peritoneal endometriosis is the most
undiagnosed type according to lack of diagnostic tests and being unrecognizable on imaging
modalities while ovarian endometriomas and deep infiltrative endometriosis lesions can be
realized by ultrasound or MRI imaging. Also, these three subtypes are mostly existing
together and even with uterine endometriosis which is named as adenomyosis. Considering the
difficulties of capturing an endometriotic lesion most of the surgeries done for deep
endometriosis or ovarian endometriomas usually fail upon insufficient excision of the
disease.
The main presentations of endometriosis are pain and infertility. Whether it can be thought
the most devastating anatomical lesion may cause more pain, the pain of endometriosis is
usually unrelated with the characteristics of pathology or severity of the disease.
Therefore, a small lesion even not visible to the naked eye may cause more pain than a large
DIE nodule. This knowledge arises the importance of threating all lesions on a symptomatic
patient with pain.
The mostly used surgical technique to diagnose and treat endometriosis is laparoscopic
surgery. Under laparoscopic scope endometriotic lesions can bee seen in black, red, white
colors and as flat or polypoid. Human eye can see wave lengths between 400-700 nm. And it is
not always easy to visualize all pathologies even with the 4 to 40 times magnification of
usual laparoscopic scopes. Human vision under white-light reflection cannot easily
discriminate different tissue types. Making color contrasts make objects easy to be catch by
human eye.
In our novel technique for endometriosis surgery we used methylene blue for its natural blue
color to make endometriotic lesions more visible and to filter red, yellow and white colors
reflecting from peritoneal surface.
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