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Tubal ligation

Tubal ligation (commonly known as having one's "tubes tied") is a surgical procedure for female sterilization in which the fallopian tubes are permanently blocked, clipped or removed. This prevents the fertilization of eggs by sperm and thus the implantation of a fertilized egg. Tubal ligation is considered a permanent method of sterilization and birth control.

Tubal ligation / BTL surgery
Tubal ligation surgery
Background
TypeSterilization
First use1930
Failure rates (first year)
Perfect use0.5%[1]
Typical use0.5%[1]
Usage
Duration effectPermanent
ReversibilitySometimes
User remindersNone
Clinic reviewNone
Advantages and disadvantages
STI protectionNo
RisksOperative and postoperative complications

Medical uses Edit

Female sterilization through tubal ligation is primarily used to permanently prevent a patient from having a spontaneous pregnancy (as opposed to pregnancy via in vitro fertilization) in the future. While both hysterectomy (the removal of the uterus) or bilateral oophorectomy (the removal of both ovaries) can also accomplish this goal, these surgeries carry generally greater health risks than tubal ligation procedures.[2][3]

Less commonly, tubal ligation procedures may also be performed for patients who are known to be carriers of mutations in genes that increase the risk of ovarian and fallopian tube cancer, such as BRCA1 and BRCA2. While the procedure for these patients still results in sterilization, the procedure is chosen preferentially among these patients who have completed childbearing, with or without a simultaneous oophorectomy.[4]

Benefits and advantages for use as contraception Edit

High effectiveness Edit

Most methods of female sterilization are approximately 99% effective or greater in preventing pregnancy.[5] These rates are roughly equivalent to the effectiveness of long-acting reversible contraceptives such as intrauterine devices and contraceptive implants, and slightly less effective than permanent male sterilization through vasectomy.[5] These rates are significantly higher than other forms of modern contraception that require regular active engagement by the user, such as oral contraceptive pills or male condoms.[6]

Avoidance of hormonal medications Edit

Many forms of female-controlled contraception rely on suppression of the menstrual cycle using progesterones and/or estrogens.[7] For patients who wish to avoid hormonal medications because of personal medical contraindications such as breast cancer, unacceptable side effects, or personal preference, tubal ligation offers highly effective birth control without the use of hormones.[citation needed]

Reduction of pelvic inflammatory disease risk Edit

Occluding or removing both fallopian tubes decreases the likelihood that a sexually transmitted infection can ascend from the vagina to the abdominal cavity, causing pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) or a tubo-ovarian abscess.[5] Tubal ligation does not eliminate the risk of PID, and does not offer protection against sexually transmitted infections.[5]

Reduction of ovarian and fallopian tube cancer risk Edit

Partial tubal ligation or full salpingectomy (a tubal ligation method that relies upon the physical removal of the fallopian tube) reduces the lifetime risk of developing ovarian or fallopian tube cancer later in life. This is true both for patients who are already known to be at high risk for ovarian or fallopian tube cancer secondary to genetic mutations, as well as females who have the baseline population risk.[5][8]

Risks and complications Edit

Risks associated with surgery and anesthesia Edit

Most tubal ligation procedures involve accessing the abdominal cavity through incisions in the abdominal wall and require some form of anesthesia. Major complications from laparoscopic surgery may include need for blood transfusion, infection, conversion to open surgery, or unplanned additional major surgery, while complications from anesthesia itself may include hypoventilation and cardiac arrest.[5] Major complications during female sterilization are uncommon, occurring in an estimated 0.1–3.5% of laparoscopic procedures, with mortality rates in the United States estimated at 1–2 patient deaths per 100,000 procedures.[5] These complications are more common for patients with a history of previous abdominal or pelvic surgery, obesity, and/or diabetes.[5]

Failure Edit

While female sterilization procedures are highly effective at preventing pregnancy, there is a small continuing risk of unintended pregnancy after tubal ligation.[9] Several factors influence the likelihood of failure: increased time since sterilization, younger age at the time of sterilization, and certain methods of sterilization are all associated with increased risk of failure.[5] Pregnancy rates at 10 years after sterilization vary depending on the type of procedure used, documented as low as 7.5 per 1,000 procedures to as high as 36.5 per 1,000 procedures.[5]

Ectopic pregnancy Edit

Overall, all pregnancies, including ectopic pregnancies, are less common among patients who have had a female sterilization procedure than among patients who have not.[5][10] However, if patients do have a pregnancy after tubal ligation, a greater percentage of these will be ectopic; approximately one third of pregnancies that occur after a tubal ligation will be ectopic pregnancies.[5] The likelihood of ectopic pregnancy is higher among patients sterilized before age 30 and differs depending on the type of sterilization procedure used.[citation needed]

Emotional after effects Edit

The majority of patients who undergo female sterilization procedures do not regret their decisions. However, regret appears to be more common among patients who undergo sterilization at a young age (often defined as younger than 30 years old),[11] patients who are unmarried at the time of sterilization, non-white patients, patients with public insurance such as Medicaid, or patients who undergo sterilization soon after the birth of a child.[5][12] Regret has not been found to be associated with the number of children a person has at the time of sterilization.[5]

Side effects Edit

Menstrual changes Edit

Patients who have undergone female sterilization procedures have minimal or no changes in their menstrual patterns. They were more likely to have perceived improvements in their menstrual cycle, including decreases in the amount of bleeding, in the number of days of bleeding, and in menstrual pain.[5]

Ovarian reserve Edit

Studies of hormone levels and ovarian reserve have demonstrated no significant changes after female sterilization, or inconsistent effects.[13] There is no strong evidence that females undergoing sterilization will experience earlier onset of menopause.[citation needed]

Sexual function Edit

Sexual function appears unchanged or improved after female sterilization compared with non-sterilized females.[14]

Hysterectomy Edit

Patients who had tubal occlusion surgeries have been found to be four to five times more likely to undergo hysterectomy later in life than those whose partners underwent vasectomy.[5] There is no known biologic mechanism to support a causal relationship between tubal ligation and subsequent hysterectomy, but there is an association across all methods of tubal ligation.[5]

Postablation tubal sterilization syndrome Edit

Some females who have undergone tubal ligation prior to an endometrial ablation procedure experience cyclic or intermittent pelvic pain; this may happen in up to 10% of women who have undergone both surgeries.[15]

Contraindications Edit

Given its permanent nature, tubal ligation is contraindicated in patients who desire future pregnancy or who want to have the option of future pregnancy. In such cases, reversible methods of contraception are recommended.[5]

Since most forms of tubal ligation require abdominal surgery under regional or general anesthesia, tubal ligation is also relatively contraindicated in patients for whom the risks of surgery and/or anesthesia are unacceptably high considering their other medical issues.[5]

Procedure technique Edit

Tubal ligation through blocking or removing the tubes may be accomplished through an open abdominal surgery, a laparoscopic approach, or a hysteroscopic approach.[16] Depending on the approach chosen, the patient will need to undergo local, general, or spinal (regional) anesthesia. The procedure may be performed either immediately after the end of a pregnancy, termed a "postpartum" or "postabortion tubal ligation", or more than six weeks after the end of a pregnancy, termed an "interval tubal ligation".[5] The steps of the sterilization procedure will depend on the type of procedure being used.[citation needed] (See Tubal ligation methods below.)

If the patient chooses a postpartum tubal ligation, the procedure will further depend on the delivery method. If the patient delivers via Cesarean section, the surgeon will remove part or all of the fallopian tubes after the infant has been delivered and the uterus has been closed.[16] Anesthesia for the tubal ligation will be the same as that being used for the Cesarean section itself, usually regional or general anesthesia. If the patient delivers vaginally and desires a postpartum tubal ligation, the surgeon will remove part or all of the fallopian tubes usually one or two days after the birth, during the same hospitalization.[16]

If the patient chooses an interval tubal ligation, the procedure will typically be performed under general anesthesia in a hospital setting. Most tubal ligations are accomplished laparoscopically, with an incision at the umbilicus and zero, one, or two smaller incisions in the lower sides of the abdomen. It is also possible to perform the surgery without a laparoscope, using larger abdominal incisions.[16] It is also possible to perform an interval tubal ligation hysteroscopically, which may be performed under local anesthesia, moderate sedation, or full general anesthesia.[16] While no methods of hysteroscopic sterilization are currently on the market in the United States as of 2019, the Essure[17] and Adiana systems were previously used for hysteroscopic sterilization, and research trials are investigating new hysteroscopic approaches.

Tubal ligation methods Edit

There are a number of methods of removing or occluding the fallopian tubes, some of which rely on medical implants and devices.

Postpartum tubal ligation Edit

Performed immediately after a delivery, this method removes a segment, or all, of both fallopian tubes. The most common techniques for partial bilateral salpingectomy are the Pomeroy[18] or Parkland[19] procedures. The ten year pregnancy rate is estimated at 7.5 pregnancies per 1000 procedures performed, and the ectopic pregnancy rate is estimated at 1.5 per 1000 procedures performed.[5]

Interval tubal ligation Edit

Bilateral salpingectomy Edit

This method removes both tubes entirely, from the uterine cornuae out to the tubal fimbriae. This method has recently become more popular for female sterilization, given evidence to support the fallopian tube as the potential site of origin of some ovarian cancers.[20] Some large medical systems such as Kaiser Permanente Northern California [21] have endorsed complete bilateral salpingectomy as the preferred means of female sterilization and professional medical societies such as the Society of Gynecologic Oncology [22] and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) recommend discussing the benefits of salpingectomy during counseling for sterilization.[23] While complete bilateral salpingectomy theoretically should have an efficacy rate that approaches 100 percent and eliminates the risk of tubal ectopic pregnancy, there is not high quality data available comparing this method to older methods.[citation needed]

Bipolar coagulation Edit

This method uses electric current to cauterize sections of the fallopian tube, with or without subsequent division of the tube.[24] The ten year pregnancy rate is estimated at 6.3 to 24.8 pregnancies per 1000 procedures performed, and the ectopic pregnancy rate is estimated at 17.1 per 1000 procedures performed.[5]

Monopolar coagulation Edit

This method uses electric current to cauterize the tube, but also allows radiating current to further damage the tubes as it spreads from the coagulation site. The tubes may also be transected after cauterization.[24] The ten year pregnancy rate is estimated at 7.5 pregnancies per 1000 procedures performed.[5]

Tubal clip Edit

This method uses a tubal clip (Filshie clip or Hulka clip) to permanently clip the fallopian tubes shut. Once applied and fastened, the clip blocks movement of eggs from the ovary to the uterus.[25] The ten year pregnancy rate is estimated at 36.5 pregnancies per 1000 procedures performed, and the ectopic pregnancy rate is estimated at 8.5 per 1000 procedures performed.[5]

Tubal ring (Falope ring) Edit

This method involves a doubling over of the fallopian tubes and application of a silastic band to the tube.[26] The ten year pregnancy rate is estimated at 17.7 pregnancies per 1000 procedures performed, and the ectopic pregnancy rate is estimated at 8.5 per 1000 procedures performed.[5]

Less commonly used or no longer used procedures Edit

Irving's procedure Edit

This method places two ligatures (sutures) around the fallopian tube and removing the segment of tube between the ligatures. The medial ends of the fallopian tubes on the side closer to the uterus are then connected to the back of the uterus itself.[27]

Uchida tubal ligation Edit

This method involves dissecting the fallopian tube from the overlying connective tissue (serosa), placing two ligatures and excising a segment of the tube, then buries the end of the fallopian tube closest to the uterus underneath the serosa.[28] Dr. Uchida reported no failures among 20,000 procedures.[29][30]

Essure tubal ligation Edit

This method closed the fallopian tubes through a hysteroscopic approach by placing two small metal and fiber coils in the fallopian tubes through the fallopian ostia. After insertion, scar tissue forms around the coils, blocking off the fallopian tubes and preventing sperm from reaching the egg.[31] It was removed from the US market in 2019.[17]

Adiana tubal ligation Edit

This method closed the fallopian tubes through a hysteroscopic approach by placing two small silicone pieces in the fallopian tubes. During the procedure, the health care provider heated a small portion of each fallopian tube and then inserts a tiny piece of silicone into each tube. After the procedure, scar tissue formed around the silicone inserts, blocking off the fallopian tubes and preventing sperm from reaching the egg.[32] It was removed from the US market in 2012.

Reversal or in vitro fertilization after tubal ligation Edit

All tubal ligation procedures are considered permanent and are not reliably reversible forms of birth control. Patients who wish to have the option of future pregnancy should ideally be directed towards effective but reversible forms of birth control, rather than sterilization procedures.[5][33] Examples of this include intrauterine devices. However, patients who desire pregnancy after having undergone a female sterilization procedure have two options.[citation needed]

Tubal reversal is a type of microsurgery to repair the fallopian tube after a tubal ligation procedure. Successful pregnancy rates after reversal surgery are 42-69%, depending on the sterilization technique that was used.[34]

Alternatively, in vitro fertilization (IVF) may allow patients with absent or occluded fallopian tubes to successfully carry a pregnancy. The choice of whether to attempt tubal reversal or move straight to IVF depends on individual patient factors, including the likelihood of successful tubal reversal surgery and the age of the patient.[35]

Recovery and rehabilitation Edit

Most laparoscopic methods of interval tubal ligation are outpatient surgeries and do not require hospitalization overnight. Patients are counseled to expect some soreness but to expect to be ready to perform daily activities 1–2 days after surgery.[36] Patients undergoing postpartum tubal ligations will not be delayed in their discharge from the hospital after birth, and recovery is not significantly different from normal postpartum recovery.[37]

History Edit

The first modern female sterilization procedure was performed in 1880 by Dr. Samuel Lungren of Toledo, Ohio, in the United States.[38] Hysteroscopic tubal ligation was developed later by Mikulicz-Radecki and Freund.[38]

Since its development, female sterilization has been periodically performed on patients without their informed consent, often specifically targeting marginalized populations.[39] Given this history of human rights abuses, current sterilization policy in the United States requires a mandatory waiting period for tubal sterilization on Medicaid beneficiaries. This waiting period is not required for private insurance beneficiaries, which has the effect of selectively restricting low-income women's access to tubal sterilization.[40]

Society and culture Edit

Prevalence Edit

Of the 64% of married or in-union women worldwide using some form of contraception, approximately one third (19% of all women) used female sterilization as their contraception, making it the most common contraceptive method globally.[41] The percentage of women using female sterilization varies significantly between different regions of the world. Rates are highest in Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean, North America, Oceania, and selected countries in Western Europe, where rates of sterilization are often greater than 40%; rates in Africa, the Middle East, and parts of Eastern Europe, however, are significantly lower, sometimes less than 2%.[42] An estimated 180 million women worldwide have undergone surgical sterilization, compared to approximately 42.5 million men who have undergone vasectomy.[42]

In the United States, female sterilization is used by 30% of married couples[5] and 22% of women who use any form of contraception, making it the second-most popular contraceptive after the birth control pill.[43] Slightly more than 8.2 million women in the US use tubal ligation as their main form of contraception,[43] and approximately 643,000 female sterilization procedures are performed each year in the United States.[5]

See also Edit

References Edit

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External links Edit

  • Birth Control Comparison Chart 2008

tubal, ligation, female, sterilisation, redirects, here, other, uses, hysterectomy, commonly, known, having, tubes, tied, surgical, procedure, female, sterilization, which, fallopian, tubes, permanently, blocked, clipped, removed, this, prevents, fertilization. Female sterilisation redirects here For other uses see hysterectomy Tubal ligation commonly known as having one s tubes tied is a surgical procedure for female sterilization in which the fallopian tubes are permanently blocked clipped or removed This prevents the fertilization of eggs by sperm and thus the implantation of a fertilized egg Tubal ligation is considered a permanent method of sterilization and birth control Tubal ligation BTL surgeryTubal ligation surgeryBackgroundTypeSterilizationFirst use1930Failure rates first year Perfect use0 5 1 Typical use0 5 1 UsageDuration effectPermanentReversibilitySometimesUser remindersNoneClinic reviewNoneAdvantages and disadvantagesSTI protectionNoRisksOperative and postoperative complications Contents 1 Medical uses 1 1 Benefits and advantages for use as contraception 1 1 1 High effectiveness 1 1 2 Avoidance of hormonal medications 1 1 3 Reduction of pelvic inflammatory disease risk 1 1 4 Reduction of ovarian and fallopian tube cancer risk 2 Risks and complications 2 1 Risks associated with surgery and anesthesia 2 2 Failure 2 3 Ectopic pregnancy 2 4 Emotional after effects 2 5 Side effects 2 5 1 Menstrual changes 2 5 2 Ovarian reserve 2 5 3 Sexual function 2 5 4 Hysterectomy 2 5 5 Postablation tubal sterilization syndrome 3 Contraindications 4 Procedure technique 5 Tubal ligation methods 5 1 Postpartum tubal ligation 5 2 Interval tubal ligation 5 2 1 Bilateral salpingectomy 5 2 2 Bipolar coagulation 5 2 3 Monopolar coagulation 5 2 4 Tubal clip 5 2 5 Tubal ring Falope ring 5 3 Less commonly used or no longer used procedures 5 3 1 Irving s procedure 5 3 2 Uchida tubal ligation 5 3 3 Essure tubal ligation 5 3 4 Adiana tubal ligation 6 Reversal or in vitro fertilization after tubal ligation 7 Recovery and rehabilitation 8 History 9 Society and culture 9 1 Prevalence 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksMedical uses EditFemale sterilization through tubal ligation is primarily used to permanently prevent a patient from having a spontaneous pregnancy as opposed to pregnancy via in vitro fertilization in the future While both hysterectomy the removal of the uterus or bilateral oophorectomy the removal of both ovaries can also accomplish this goal these surgeries carry generally greater health risks than tubal ligation procedures 2 3 Less commonly tubal ligation procedures may also be performed for patients who are known to be carriers of mutations in genes that increase the risk of ovarian and fallopian tube cancer such as BRCA1 and BRCA2 While the procedure for these patients still results in sterilization the procedure is chosen preferentially among these patients who have completed childbearing with or without a simultaneous oophorectomy 4 Benefits and advantages for use as contraception Edit High effectiveness Edit Further information Comparison of birth control methods Most methods of female sterilization are approximately 99 effective or greater in preventing pregnancy 5 These rates are roughly equivalent to the effectiveness of long acting reversible contraceptives such as intrauterine devices and contraceptive implants and slightly less effective than permanent male sterilization through vasectomy 5 These rates are significantly higher than other forms of modern contraception that require regular active engagement by the user such as oral contraceptive pills or male condoms 6 Avoidance of hormonal medications Edit Many forms of female controlled contraception rely on suppression of the menstrual cycle using progesterones and or estrogens 7 For patients who wish to avoid hormonal medications because of personal medical contraindications such as breast cancer unacceptable side effects or personal preference tubal ligation offers highly effective birth control without the use of hormones citation needed Reduction of pelvic inflammatory disease risk Edit Occluding or removing both fallopian tubes decreases the likelihood that a sexually transmitted infection can ascend from the vagina to the abdominal cavity causing pelvic inflammatory disease PID or a tubo ovarian abscess 5 Tubal ligation does not eliminate the risk of PID and does not offer protection against sexually transmitted infections 5 Reduction of ovarian and fallopian tube cancer risk Edit Partial tubal ligation or full salpingectomy a tubal ligation method that relies upon the physical removal of the fallopian tube reduces the lifetime risk of developing ovarian or fallopian tube cancer later in life This is true both for patients who are already known to be at high risk for ovarian or fallopian tube cancer secondary to genetic mutations as well as females who have the baseline population risk 5 8 Risks and complications EditSee also Procedure technique and Tubal ligation methods Risks associated with surgery and anesthesia Edit Most tubal ligation procedures involve accessing the abdominal cavity through incisions in the abdominal wall and require some form of anesthesia Major complications from laparoscopic surgery may include need for blood transfusion infection conversion to open surgery or unplanned additional major surgery while complications from anesthesia itself may include hypoventilation and cardiac arrest 5 Major complications during female sterilization are uncommon occurring in an estimated 0 1 3 5 of laparoscopic procedures with mortality rates in the United States estimated at 1 2 patient deaths per 100 000 procedures 5 These complications are more common for patients with a history of previous abdominal or pelvic surgery obesity and or diabetes 5 Failure Edit While female sterilization procedures are highly effective at preventing pregnancy there is a small continuing risk of unintended pregnancy after tubal ligation 9 Several factors influence the likelihood of failure increased time since sterilization younger age at the time of sterilization and certain methods of sterilization are all associated with increased risk of failure 5 Pregnancy rates at 10 years after sterilization vary depending on the type of procedure used documented as low as 7 5 per 1 000 procedures to as high as 36 5 per 1 000 procedures 5 Ectopic pregnancy Edit Overall all pregnancies including ectopic pregnancies are less common among patients who have had a female sterilization procedure than among patients who have not 5 10 However if patients do have a pregnancy after tubal ligation a greater percentage of these will be ectopic approximately one third of pregnancies that occur after a tubal ligation will be ectopic pregnancies 5 The likelihood of ectopic pregnancy is higher among patients sterilized before age 30 and differs depending on the type of sterilization procedure used citation needed Emotional after effects Edit The majority of patients who undergo female sterilization procedures do not regret their decisions However regret appears to be more common among patients who undergo sterilization at a young age often defined as younger than 30 years old 11 patients who are unmarried at the time of sterilization non white patients patients with public insurance such as Medicaid or patients who undergo sterilization soon after the birth of a child 5 12 Regret has not been found to be associated with the number of children a person has at the time of sterilization 5 Side effects Edit Menstrual changes Edit Patients who have undergone female sterilization procedures have minimal or no changes in their menstrual patterns They were more likely to have perceived improvements in their menstrual cycle including decreases in the amount of bleeding in the number of days of bleeding and in menstrual pain 5 Ovarian reserve Edit Studies of hormone levels and ovarian reserve have demonstrated no significant changes after female sterilization or inconsistent effects 13 There is no strong evidence that females undergoing sterilization will experience earlier onset of menopause citation needed Sexual function Edit Sexual function appears unchanged or improved after female sterilization compared with non sterilized females 14 Hysterectomy Edit Patients who had tubal occlusion surgeries have been found to be four to five times more likely to undergo hysterectomy later in life than those whose partners underwent vasectomy 5 There is no known biologic mechanism to support a causal relationship between tubal ligation and subsequent hysterectomy but there is an association across all methods of tubal ligation 5 Postablation tubal sterilization syndrome Edit Main article Post ablation tubal sterilization Some females who have undergone tubal ligation prior to an endometrial ablation procedure experience cyclic or intermittent pelvic pain this may happen in up to 10 of women who have undergone both surgeries 15 Contraindications EditGiven its permanent nature tubal ligation is contraindicated in patients who desire future pregnancy or who want to have the option of future pregnancy In such cases reversible methods of contraception are recommended 5 Since most forms of tubal ligation require abdominal surgery under regional or general anesthesia tubal ligation is also relatively contraindicated in patients for whom the risks of surgery and or anesthesia are unacceptably high considering their other medical issues 5 Procedure technique EditTubal ligation through blocking or removing the tubes may be accomplished through an open abdominal surgery a laparoscopic approach or a hysteroscopic approach 16 Depending on the approach chosen the patient will need to undergo local general or spinal regional anesthesia The procedure may be performed either immediately after the end of a pregnancy termed a postpartum or postabortion tubal ligation or more than six weeks after the end of a pregnancy termed an interval tubal ligation 5 The steps of the sterilization procedure will depend on the type of procedure being used citation needed See Tubal ligation methods below If the patient chooses a postpartum tubal ligation the procedure will further depend on the delivery method If the patient delivers via Cesarean section the surgeon will remove part or all of the fallopian tubes after the infant has been delivered and the uterus has been closed 16 Anesthesia for the tubal ligation will be the same as that being used for the Cesarean section itself usually regional or general anesthesia If the patient delivers vaginally and desires a postpartum tubal ligation the surgeon will remove part or all of the fallopian tubes usually one or two days after the birth during the same hospitalization 16 If the patient chooses an interval tubal ligation the procedure will typically be performed under general anesthesia in a hospital setting Most tubal ligations are accomplished laparoscopically with an incision at the umbilicus and zero one or two smaller incisions in the lower sides of the abdomen It is also possible to perform the surgery without a laparoscope using larger abdominal incisions 16 It is also possible to perform an interval tubal ligation hysteroscopically which may be performed under local anesthesia moderate sedation or full general anesthesia 16 While no methods of hysteroscopic sterilization are currently on the market in the United States as of 2019 the Essure 17 and Adiana systems were previously used for hysteroscopic sterilization and research trials are investigating new hysteroscopic approaches Tubal ligation methods EditThere are a number of methods of removing or occluding the fallopian tubes some of which rely on medical implants and devices Postpartum tubal ligation Edit Performed immediately after a delivery this method removes a segment or all of both fallopian tubes The most common techniques for partial bilateral salpingectomy are the Pomeroy 18 or Parkland 19 procedures The ten year pregnancy rate is estimated at 7 5 pregnancies per 1000 procedures performed and the ectopic pregnancy rate is estimated at 1 5 per 1000 procedures performed 5 Interval tubal ligation Edit Bilateral salpingectomy Edit This method removes both tubes entirely from the uterine cornuae out to the tubal fimbriae This method has recently become more popular for female sterilization given evidence to support the fallopian tube as the potential site of origin of some ovarian cancers 20 Some large medical systems such as Kaiser Permanente Northern California 21 have endorsed complete bilateral salpingectomy as the preferred means of female sterilization and professional medical societies such as the Society of Gynecologic Oncology 22 and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists ACOG recommend discussing the benefits of salpingectomy during counseling for sterilization 23 While complete bilateral salpingectomy theoretically should have an efficacy rate that approaches 100 percent and eliminates the risk of tubal ectopic pregnancy there is not high quality data available comparing this method to older methods citation needed Bipolar coagulation Edit This method uses electric current to cauterize sections of the fallopian tube with or without subsequent division of the tube 24 The ten year pregnancy rate is estimated at 6 3 to 24 8 pregnancies per 1000 procedures performed and the ectopic pregnancy rate is estimated at 17 1 per 1000 procedures performed 5 Monopolar coagulation Edit This method uses electric current to cauterize the tube but also allows radiating current to further damage the tubes as it spreads from the coagulation site The tubes may also be transected after cauterization 24 The ten year pregnancy rate is estimated at 7 5 pregnancies per 1000 procedures performed 5 Tubal clip Edit This method uses a tubal clip Filshie clip or Hulka clip to permanently clip the fallopian tubes shut Once applied and fastened the clip blocks movement of eggs from the ovary to the uterus 25 The ten year pregnancy rate is estimated at 36 5 pregnancies per 1000 procedures performed and the ectopic pregnancy rate is estimated at 8 5 per 1000 procedures performed 5 Tubal ring Falope ring Edit This method involves a doubling over of the fallopian tubes and application of a silastic band to the tube 26 The ten year pregnancy rate is estimated at 17 7 pregnancies per 1000 procedures performed and the ectopic pregnancy rate is estimated at 8 5 per 1000 procedures performed 5 Less commonly used or no longer used procedures Edit Irving s procedure Edit This method places two ligatures sutures around the fallopian tube and removing the segment of tube between the ligatures The medial ends of the fallopian tubes on the side closer to the uterus are then connected to the back of the uterus itself 27 Uchida tubal ligation Edit This method involves dissecting the fallopian tube from the overlying connective tissue serosa placing two ligatures and excising a segment of the tube then buries the end of the fallopian tube closest to the uterus underneath the serosa 28 Dr Uchida reported no failures among 20 000 procedures 29 30 Essure tubal ligation Edit This method closed the fallopian tubes through a hysteroscopic approach by placing two small metal and fiber coils in the fallopian tubes through the fallopian ostia After insertion scar tissue forms around the coils blocking off the fallopian tubes and preventing sperm from reaching the egg 31 It was removed from the US market in 2019 17 Adiana tubal ligation Edit This method closed the fallopian tubes through a hysteroscopic approach by placing two small silicone pieces in the fallopian tubes During the procedure the health care provider heated a small portion of each fallopian tube and then inserts a tiny piece of silicone into each tube After the procedure scar tissue formed around the silicone inserts blocking off the fallopian tubes and preventing sperm from reaching the egg 32 It was removed from the US market in 2012 Reversal or in vitro fertilization after tubal ligation EditMain article Tubal reversal All tubal ligation procedures are considered permanent and are not reliably reversible forms of birth control Patients who wish to have the option of future pregnancy should ideally be directed towards effective but reversible forms of birth control rather than sterilization procedures 5 33 Examples of this include intrauterine devices However patients who desire pregnancy after having undergone a female sterilization procedure have two options citation needed Tubal reversal is a type of microsurgery to repair the fallopian tube after a tubal ligation procedure Successful pregnancy rates after reversal surgery are 42 69 depending on the sterilization technique that was used 34 Alternatively in vitro fertilization IVF may allow patients with absent or occluded fallopian tubes to successfully carry a pregnancy The choice of whether to attempt tubal reversal or move straight to IVF depends on individual patient factors including the likelihood of successful tubal reversal surgery and the age of the patient 35 Recovery and rehabilitation EditMost laparoscopic methods of interval tubal ligation are outpatient surgeries and do not require hospitalization overnight Patients are counseled to expect some soreness but to expect to be ready to perform daily activities 1 2 days after surgery 36 Patients undergoing postpartum tubal ligations will not be delayed in their discharge from the hospital after birth and recovery is not significantly different from normal postpartum recovery 37 History EditThe first modern female sterilization procedure was performed in 1880 by Dr Samuel Lungren of Toledo Ohio in the United States 38 Hysteroscopic tubal ligation was developed later by Mikulicz Radecki and Freund 38 Since its development female sterilization has been periodically performed on patients without their informed consent often specifically targeting marginalized populations 39 Given this history of human rights abuses current sterilization policy in the United States requires a mandatory waiting period for tubal sterilization on Medicaid beneficiaries This waiting period is not required for private insurance beneficiaries which has the effect of selectively restricting low income women s access to tubal sterilization 40 Society and culture EditPrevalence Edit Of the 64 of married or in union women worldwide using some form of contraception approximately one third 19 of all women used female sterilization as their contraception making it the most common contraceptive method globally 41 The percentage of women using female sterilization varies significantly between different regions of the world Rates are highest in Asia Latin America and the Caribbean North America Oceania and selected countries in Western Europe where rates of sterilization are often greater than 40 rates in Africa the Middle East and parts of Eastern Europe however are significantly lower sometimes less than 2 42 An estimated 180 million women worldwide have undergone surgical sterilization compared to approximately 42 5 million men who have undergone vasectomy 42 In the United States female sterilization is used by 30 of married couples 5 and 22 of women who use any form of contraception making it the second most popular contraceptive after the birth control pill 43 Slightly more than 8 2 million women in the US use tubal ligation as their main form of contraception 43 and approximately 643 000 female sterilization procedures are performed each year in the United States 5 See also EditCompulsory sterilizationReferences Edit a b Trussell James 2011 Contraceptive efficacy In Hatcher Robert A Trussell James Nelson Anita L Cates Willard Jr Kowal Deborah Policar Michael S eds Contraceptive technology 20th revised ed New York Ardent Media pp 779 863 ISBN 978 1 59708 004 0 ISSN 0091 9721 OCLC 781956734 Table 26 1 Table 3 2 Percentage of women experiencing an unintended pregnancy during the first year of typical use and the first year of perfect use of contraception and the percentage continuing use at the end of the first year United States Archived 2017 02 15 at the Wayback Machine Clarke Pearson Daniel L Geller Elizabeth J March 2013 Complications of Hysterectomy Obstetrics amp Gynecology 121 3 654 673 doi 10 1097 AOG 0b013e3182841594 ISSN 0029 7844 PMID 23635631 S2CID 25380233 Shuster L T Gostout B S Grossardt B R Rocca W A 1 September 2008 Prophylactic oophorectomy in premenopausal women and long term health Menopause International 14 3 111 116 doi 10 1258 mi 2008 008016 ISSN 1754 0453 PMC 2585770 PMID 18714076 Committee On Practice Bulletins Gynecology Committee on Genetics 2017 Practice Bulletin No 182 Hereditary Breast and Ovarian Cancer Syndrome Obstetrics amp Gynecology 130 3 e110 e126 doi 10 1097 AOG 0000000000002296 ISSN 0029 7844 PMID 28832484 S2CID 25421501 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab American College of Obstetricians Gynecologists Committee on Practice Bulletins Gynecology March 2019 ACOG Practice Bulletin No 208 Benefits and Risks of Sterilization Obstetrics amp Gynecology 133 3 e194 e207 doi 10 1097 AOG 0000000000003111 ISSN 0029 7844 PMID 30640233 S2CID 58625472 U S Selected Practice Recommendations for Contraceptive Use 2013 www cdc gov Retrieved 9 July 2019 Gebel Berg Erika 25 March 2015 The Chemistry of the Pill ACS Central Science 1 1 5 7 doi 10 1021 acscentsci 5b00066 ISSN 2374 7943 PMC 4827491 PMID 27162937 Cibula D Widschwendter M Majek O Dusek L 1 January 2011 Tubal ligation and the risk of ovarian cancer review and meta analysis Human Reproduction Update 17 1 55 67 doi 10 1093 humupd dmq030 ISSN 1355 4786 PMID 20634209 Lawrie Theresa A Kulier Regina Nardin Juan Manuel 5 August 2016 Cochrane Fertility Regulation Group ed Techniques for the interruption of tubal patency for female sterilisation Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 8 CD003034 doi 10 1002 14651858 CD003034 pub4 PMC 7004248 PMID 27494193 American College of Obstetricians Gynecologists Committee on Practice Bulletins Gynecology March 2018 ACOG Practice Bulletin No 193 Tubal Ectopic Pregnancy Obstetrics amp Gynecology 131 3 e91 e103 doi 10 1097 AOG 0000000000002560 ISSN 0029 7844 PMID 29470343 S2CID 3466601 Curtis Kathryn M Mohllajee Anshu P Peterson Herbert B February 2006 Regret following female sterilization at a young age a systematic review Contraception 73 2 205 210 doi 10 1016 j contraception 2005 08 006 PMID 16413851 Chi I C Jones D B October 1994 Incidence risk factors and prevention of poststerilization regret in women an updated international review from an epidemiological perspective Obstetrical amp Gynecological Survey 49 10 722 732 doi 10 1097 00006254 199410000 00028 ISSN 0029 7828 PMID 7816397 Ercan Cihangir Mutlu Sakinci Mehmet Coksuer Hakan Ko Keskin Ugur Tapan Serkan Ergun Ali January 2013 Ovarian reserve testing before and after laparoscopic tubal bipolar electrodesiccation and transection European Journal of Obstetrics Gynecology and Reproductive Biology 166 1 56 60 doi 10 1016 j ejogrb 2012 09 013 ISSN 1872 7654 PMID 23036487 Costello Caroline Hillis Susan D Marchbanks Polly A Jamieson Denise J Peterson Herbert B US Collaborative Review of Sterilization Working Group September 2002 The effect of interval tubal sterilization on sexual interest and pleasure Obstetrics and Gynecology 100 3 511 517 doi 10 1016 s0029 7844 02 02042 2 ISSN 0029 7844 PMID 12220771 S2CID 23735040 McCausland Arthur M McCausland Vance M June 2002 Frequency of symptomatic cornual hematometra and postablation tubal sterilization syndrome after total rollerball endometrial ablation a 10 year follow up American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology 186 6 1274 1280 discussion 1280 1283 doi 10 1067 mob 2002 123730 ISSN 0002 9378 PMID 12066109 a b c d e Bartz Deborah Greenberg James A 2008 Sterilization in the United States Reviews in Obstetrics amp Gynecology 1 1 23 32 ISSN 1941 2797 PMC 2492586 PMID 18701927 a b Essure Permanent Birth Control US Food and Drug Administration 15 May 2019 Retrieved 31 July 2019 Sterilization by the Pomeroy Operation Atlasofpelvicsurgery com Retrieved 2013 06 25 The Parkland Procedure The Global Library of Women s Medicine 24 July 2019 Powell C Bethan Alabaster Amy Simmons Sarah Garcia Christine Martin Maria McBride Allen Sally Littell Ramey D November 2017 Salpingectomy for Sterilization Change in Practice in a Large Integrated Health Care System 2011 2016 Obstetrics amp Gynecology 130 5 961 967 doi 10 1097 AOG 0000000000002312 ISSN 0029 7844 PMID 29016486 S2CID 45039217 Practice Resource Salpingectomy for Ovarian Cancer Prevention PDF May 2013 Retrieved 30 July 2019 SGO Clinical Practice Statement Salpingectomy for Ovarian Cancer Prevention Society of Gynecologic Oncology November 2013 Retrieved 30 July 2019 ACOG Committee Opinion No 774 Opportunistic Salpingectomy as a Strategy for Epithelial Ovarian Cancer Prevention Obstetrics and Gynecology 133 4 e279 e284 April 2019 doi 10 1097 AOG 0000000000003164 ISSN 1873 233X PMID 30913199 a b Sterilization by Electrocoagulation and Division via Laparoscopy Atlasofpelvicsurgery com Retrieved 2013 06 25 Hulka Clip Sterilization via Laparoscopy Atlasofpelvicsurgery com Retrieved 2013 06 25 Silastic Band Sterilization via Laparoscopy Atlasofpelvicsurgery com Retrieved 2013 06 25 Sterilization by the Modified Irving Technique Atlasofpelvicsurgery com Retrieved 2013 06 25 Sciarra John J Volume 6 Chapter 39 Surgical Procedures for Tubal Sterilization www glowm com Retrieved 31 August 2020 Green L R Laros R K June 1980 Postpartum sterilization Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology 23 2 647 659 doi 10 1097 00003081 198006000 00030 ISSN 0009 9201 PMID 6447003 Uchida H 1975 01 15 Uchida tubal sterilization American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology 121 2 153 158 doi 10 1016 0002 9378 75 90630 4 ISSN 0002 9378 PMID 123119 Essure System P020014 Fda gov Retrieved 2013 06 25 Conceptus R Announces Settlement of Patent Infringement Lawsuit With Hologic Nasdaq CPTS Globenewswire com 30 April 2012 Retrieved 25 June 2013 Committee on Ethics April 2017 Committee Opinion No 695 Sterilization of Women Obstetrics amp Gynecology 129 4 e109 e116 doi 10 1097 AOG 0000000000002023 ISSN 0029 7844 PMID 28333823 S2CID 46786279 van Seeters Jacoba A H Chua Su Jen Mol Ben W J Koks Carolien A M 1 May 2017 Tubal anastomosis after previous sterilization a systematic review Human Reproduction Update 23 3 358 370 doi 10 1093 humupd dmx003 ISSN 1355 4786 PMID 28333337 Boeckxstaens A Devroey P Collins J Tournaye H 25 July 2007 Getting pregnant after tubal sterilization surgical reversal or IVF Human Reproduction 22 10 2660 2664 doi 10 1093 humrep dem248 ISSN 0268 1161 PMID 17670765 Frequently Asked Questions Special Procedures Laparoscopy American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists 1 February 2019 Retrieved 30 July 2019 Frequently Asked Questions Contraception Postpartum Sterilization American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists May 2016 Retrieved 30 July 2019 a b Siegler A M Grunebaum A December 1980 The 100th anniversary of tubal sterilization Fertility and Sterility 34 6 610 613 doi 10 1016 S0015 0282 16 45206 4 ISSN 0015 0282 PMID 7004916 Eliminating forced coercive and otherwise involuntary sterilization PDF World Health Organization 2014 Retrieved 30 July 2019 Moaddab Amirhossein McCullough Laurence B Chervenak Frank A Fox Karin A Aagaard Kjersti Marie Salmanian Bahram Raine Susan P Shamshirsaz Alireza A 1 June 2015 Health care justice and its implications for current policy of a mandatory waiting period for elective tubal sterilization American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology 212 6 736 739 doi 10 1016 j ajog 2015 03 049 ISSN 1097 6868 PMID 25935572 Trends in Contraceptive Use Worldwide PDF Department of Economic and Social Affairs Population Division United Nations 2015 Retrieved July 8 2019 a b EngenderHealth Firm 2002 Contraceptive sterilization global issues and trends Ross John A 1934 New York NY EngenderHealth ISBN 1885063318 OCLC 49322541 a b Contraceptive Use in the United States Guttmacher Institute 4 August 2004 Retrieved 9 July 2019 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tubal ligation Birth Control Comparison Chart 2008 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tubal ligation amp oldid 1169421928, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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