Hysterectomy (original) (raw)
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Summary
A hysterectomy is surgery to remove a woman's uterus or womb. The uterus is the place where a baby grows when a woman is pregnant. After a hysterectomy, you no longer have menstrual periods and can't become pregnant. Sometimes the surgery also removes the ovaries and fallopian tubes. If you have both ovaries taken out, you will enter menopause.
Your health care provider might recommend a hysterectomy if you have:
- Fibroids
- Endometriosis that hasn't been cured by medicine or surgery
- Uterine prolapse - when the uterus drops into the vagina
- Cancer of the uterine, cervix, or ovaries
- Vaginal bleeding that persists despite treatment
- Chronic pelvic pain, as a last resort
Dept. of Health and Human Services Office on Women's Health
Start Here
Hysterectomy (Department of Health and Human Services, Office on Women's Health) Also in Spanish
How Surgery Can Affect the Sex Life of Females with Cancer (American Cancer Society)
Laparoscopy
(National Library of Medicine) Also in Spanish
Oophorectomy (Ovary Removal Surgery) (Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research) Also in Spanish
Hysterectomy - Series (Medical Encyclopedia) Also in Spanish
ClinicalTrials.gov: Hysterectomy
(National Institutes of Health)