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Chapter 1
Do you have an infertility problem ? When to Start Worrying!

Chapter 2
How Babies are Made - The Basics

Chapter 3
Finding Out What’s Wrong -- The Basic Medical Tests

Chapter 4
Testing the Man - Semen Analysis.

Chapter 5
Beyond the Semen Analysis

Chapter 6
Diagnosis and Treatment for Male Infertility -- More Confusion !

Chapter 7
The Case of the Man with a Low Sperm Count.

Chapter 8
Microinjection: The Latest Advance in Treating the Infertile Man.

Chapter 9
Ultrasound - Seeing with Sound.

Chapter 10
Laparoscopy -- The Kinder Cut

Chapter 11
Hysteroscopy

Chapter 12
The Tubal Connection

Chapter 13
Ovulation -- Normal and Abnormal

Chapter 14
The Older Woman

Chapter 15
Polycystic Ovarian Disease (PCOD)

Chapter 16
The Cervical Factor

Chapter 17
Hirsutism -- Excess Facial and Body Hair

Chapter 18
Endometriosis -- The Silent Invader

Chapter 19
Ectopic Pregnancy – The Time Bomb in the Tube

Chapter 20
Unexplained Infertility

Chapter 21
Secondary Infertility -- Caught Between Fertile And Infertile Worlds

Chapter 22
Empty Arms -- The Lonely Trauma of Miscarriage

Chapter 23
Understanding Your Medicines

Chapter 24
Intrauterine Insemination

Chapter 25
Test Tube Babies - IVF & GIFT

Chapter 26
PREIMPLANTATION GENETIC DIAGNOSIS - the newest ART
Chapter 27
Using Donor Sperm

Chapter 28
Surrogate Mothering

Chapter 29
When Enough is Enough - The Decision to End Treatment

Chapter 30
Adoption - Yours by Choice

Chapter 31
Childfree living - Life without children

Chapter 32
Stress And Infertility

Chapter 33
The Emotional Crisis of Infertility

Chapter 34
How to Cope with Infertility

Chapter 35
Infertility and Sexuality

Chapter 36
Support Groups-Self-Help is the Best Help

Chapter 37
Myths and Misconceptions

Chapter 38
Helping Hands - How Friends and Relatives can Help

Chapter 39
RIGHTS OF THE INFERTILE COUPLE - AND WHAT SOCIETY NEEDS TO DO ABOUT THEM

Chapter 40
Alternative Medicine: Exploring Your Treatment Options

Chapter 41
Making Decisions about Treatment

Chapter 42
How to Find the Best Doctor

Chapter 43
How to Make the Most of Your Doctor

Chapter 44
Let the reader beware - making sense of medical stories in the news

Chapter 45
THE INFERTILE PATIENT'S GUIDE TO THE INTERNET

Chapter 46
The Ethical Issues - Right or Wrong ?

Chapter 47
How Much Does Treatment Cost?

Chapter 48
Pregnant - At Last !

Chapter 49
Preventing Infertility

Chapter 50
The Infertile Patient's Prayer and Infertility "Defined"

Chapter 51
Making IVF affordable

Chapter 52
Why are women scared of IVF ?

Chapter 53
INFERTILITY RECORD SHEET


Chapter 54
Self-Insemination

Laparoscopy -- The Kinder Cut

After the operation, there may be some discomfort. This may include:
    • Mild nausea as a result of the medication or the surgical procedure.
    • Pain in the neck and shoulder due to the gas inside the abdomen.
    • Pain in the areas where the instruments passed through the abdominal wall.
    • A scratchy throat and hoarse voice if a breathing tube was used during general anesthesia.
    • Cramps, like menstrual cramps.
    • Discharge like a menstrual flow for a day or two.
    • Muscle aches.
Most of these minor symptoms will disappear within a day or two after surgery. The abdomen may feel swollen for a few days. Any unusual or peculiar symptoms should be reported at once to the doctor.
To really appreciate the benefits of laparoscopy, one should remember that the alternative is major surgery (laparotomy) which involves a large abdominal incision, a four to six day hospital stay, and four to six weeks of postoperative recovery time.
While the doctors may term laparoscopy as being "minor" surgery, remember that for the patient all surgery is major!  The risk of laparoscopy are minimal. But certain conditions increase the possibility of complications. If there has been previous surgery in the abdomen, especially involving the bowel, there is an increased risk. Other conditions that lead to a higher risk of complications are evidence of an infection in the abdomen, a large growth or tumor within the abdomen, and obesity.
Complications among young, healthy women under going laparoscopy are rare and occur only in about three out of 1000 cases. These complications can include injuries to structures in the abdomen such as the bowel, a blood vessel or the bladder. Most often, these injuries occur when the laparoscope is placed through the navel. If such an injury occurs during the procedure, the physician can perform major surgery and correct the damage through a longer abdominal incision. Sometimes, complications may arise after surgery. If bleeding or pain appears excessive or if high fever develops, the doctor should be informed.
Where to do the laparoscopy
In order to choose the best doctor for performing your laparoscopy, you need to ask the following questions.
    1. How many laparoscopies have you done?
    2. Do you use multiple punctures?
    3. Do you use a video for recording the operation?
    4. If you find a problem, will you correct it at the same time?  Ideally, if the doctor finds a problem during the laparoscopy, he should correct it at the same time, rather than call you again for a second surgical procedure, which only adds to your expense and risk.
    Comparing laparoscopy and HSG
    A common question patients ask is if they can go in for an X-ray (hysterosalpingogram) instead of a laparoscopy to find out if their tubes are open? While it is true that an HSG will provide accurate information about whether or not the tubes are open, there are other major benefits which laparoscopy offers and which HSG does not. HSG provides information only about the inside of the tubes and uterine cavity, whereas in laparoscopy, not only can the tubal patency be determined, but other disorders inside the abdomen which affect tubal function and which do not show up on HSG (such as endometriosis and tubal adhesions) can also be diagnosed.  Moreover, major bonus in the case of laparoscopy is that it offers the doctor a chance to diagnose and treat the problem at the same time if possible - double bonus! Of course, the advantage of HSG is that no surgery, hospitalization or anesthesia is needed: it is less expensive; and that a hard copy record is provided, which all doctors can refer to later on. In fact both the HSG and laparoscopy are complementary procedures, and you may even need both, especially if your tubes are blocked.
    A common problem which patients face in practice is that many doctors will insist on repeating the laparoscopy. One reason for this is that doctors feel that they need to do the laparoscopy for themselves, because they cannot "trust" another doctor's judgment. This is, of course a major problem for patients, who suffer repeated (and unnecessary) laparoscopies. Having a video record should help to minimize this problem. What happens if your laparoscopy was normal and the second doctor wants to repeat it anyway? Sometimes doctors have little to offer in the way of effective treatment and since there is nothing else to do, they suggest a repeat scopy to which the hapless patient is forced to agree. If your first scopy did, in fact indicate you had a problem, a second look laparoscopy may be indicated (and this should have been discussed with you after the first scopy) to determine if the problem has been successfully resolved. Ask the doctor what information he hopes to get by doing the repeat laparoscopy and how this will change your treatment. If you feel the doctor wants to do a scopy for no very good reason, refuse. It's a surgical procedure after all - and it's your body.
    Thinking it over
    A major benefit of laparoscopy is that in addition to allowing the accurate diagnosis of a problem, if it exists, operative laparoscopy can also be done in the same surgery to correct the problem. Often, the laparoscopy provides reassurance that the woman is normal and that the chances of having a baby are therefore good. In such cases, it even allows the doctor to perform treatment for the infertility in that cycle, if appropriate, by using intratubal insemination or SIFT.
    Laparoscopy often leads to an accurate diagnosis which, in turn leads to more appropriate and specific treatment. Once the laparoscopy is over, the doctor will usually have a good idea of what is wrong , and what can it being treated effectively are improved now that the diagnosis is accurate.
    After the laparoscopy
    At the follow-up visit, discuss with the doctor what he found at the time of the laparoscopy and also how to proceed on the basis of the findings. There are three possible courses of action:
    1. Normal findings: Such findings are the commonest result and can be very assuring!
    2. Abnormal findings: which could be corrected at the time of laparoscopy itself: Perhaps the doctor may suggest a second look laparoscopy or HSG after some time to document that the problem has, in fact been corrected or else in addition medical treatment may be advised to try to correct a residual problem (e.g. antibiotics for pelvic infection, medical treatment for endometriosis) A quandary may arise when the laparoscopy reveals a finding which may be of no relevance to the problem of infertility. For example during laparoscopy the doctor may detect small fibroids, early endometriosis, or an ovarian cyst. These are common disorders and are often found in fertile women as well. Just making a diagnosis of these disorders does not automatically mean that they need to be corrected: they may be red herrings, which do not affect fertility. In fact, unnecessary surgery to remove these disorders can aggravate your infertility
    3. Abnormal findings: which could not be corrected during the laparoscopy : For treatment, the doctor may advise formal surgery (for example microsurgery for blocked tubes) or IVF (for example for patients with pelvic TB)

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