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X. Chavet

Bio: X. Chavet is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Laparoscopy & Laparotomy. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 8 publications receiving 339 citations.

Papers
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Journal Article
TL;DR: A 31 year old patient presenting with primary infertility underwent an operative laparoscopy for the treatment of bilateral hydrosalpinges, during which a myomectomy was also performed, which revealed a uterine rupture at the site of the previous myomextomy scar.
Abstract: A 31 year old patient presenting with primary infertility underwent an operative laparoscopy for the treatment of bilateral hydrosalpinges, during which a myomectomy was also performed. The uterus was repaired using interrupted sutures. At follow-up laparoscopy seven weeks later, a uterine fistula was diagnosed and was oversewn using a single 'figure of eight' suture. One year later the patient became pregnant through in-vitro fertilization. At 34 weeks gestation, she required an emergency laparotomy for acute abdominal pain and the presence of fetal bradycardia. The operative findings revealed a uterine rupture at the site of the previous myomectomy scar. This was then enlarged with a scalpel and a live baby was delivered. The uterus was repaired in two layers. The postoperative period for both mother and baby was satisfactory. This complication raises the problem of the quality of uterine repair following laparoscopic myomectomy, together with the question of how to prevent this type of life-threatening situation.

175 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Preliminary results from a prospective clinical study on laparoscopic surgery for myomas suggest that it seems to offer comparable results with those obtained by laparotomy.
Abstract: Fertility outcome following laparoscopic myomectomy was evaluated. A prospective clinical study was carried out between October 1990 and October 1993 in 21 infertile patients who underwent laparoscopic myomectomy for a myoma measuring > or = 5 cm in diameter. The overall rate of intrauterine pregnancy was 33.3% (seven patients). Out of 12 patients with infertility factors associated with uterine myomas, three (25.0%) became pregnant, whereas four (44.4%) out of nine patients with no other associated infertility factor became pregnant. No uterine rupture was observed. Out of the seven pregnancies, four were spontaneous and began within 1 year of the operation. The other three were achieved after in-vitro fertilization in patients with associated infertility factors. In the four patients who gave birth by Caesarean section, no adhesions were found on the myomectomy scar. From these preliminary results, laparoscopic surgery for myomas seems to offer comparable results with those obtained by laparotomy.

112 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A case of MRKH syndrome is reported in which the patient benefited from laparoscopic surgery for bilateral resection of rudimentary horns, thus avoiding laparotomy for the patient.
Abstract: Mayer-Rokitansky-Kuster-Hauser (MRKH) syndrome is a partial or complete absence (agenesis) of the uterus with an absent or hypoplastic vagina. Until now, the recommended treatment, when resection of a rudimentary horn was indicated, was laparotomy. We report a case of MRKH syndrome in which the patient benefited from laparoscopic surgery for bilateral resection of rudimentary horns. Laparoscopy is not only useful for diagnosis of uterine malformations but can also be valuable for any treatment required for this type of malformation, this being carried out during the same operative procedure, thus avoiding laparotomy for the patient. The creation of an artificial vagina is performed during a second operation.

28 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: The most important advantages of operative laparoscopy are the following: less esthetic drawbacks, minimal risk of parietal and infectious complications, lower risk of post operative adhesions, more comfortable post operative course and lower cost due to considerably shortened hospital stay and recovery period.
Abstract: Initially used exclusively for diagnosis, laparoscopy is now a surgical method in gynecology but also in many other specialties. In gynecology, the results of laparoscopic surgery are comparable to those obtained by laparotomy in many indications: ectopic pregnancy, ovarian cysts, endometriosis, tubo-peritoneal sterility... Because of the advantages of laparoscopic surgery over traditional surgical treatment by laparotomy, operative laparoscopy is, in these indications, now recognized to be the best choice of surgical treatment. The most important advantages of operative laparoscopy are the following: less esthetic drawbacks, minimal risk of parietal and infectious complications, lower risk of post operative adhesions, more comfortable post operative course and lower cost due to considerably shortened hospital stay and recovery period. The risk of complications is directly correlated to the surgeon's experience and the importance of the surgery performed.

7 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Although uterine myomas presently are not well understood, many advances have been made in the understanding of the hormonal factors, genetic factors, growth factors, and molecular biology of these benign tumors.

604 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The purpose of this study was to compare, in infertile patients, the efficacy of laparoscopic myomectomy versus abdominal myomeCTomy, in restoring fertility and to evaluate the obstetric outcomes.
Abstract: The purpose of this study was to compare, in infertile patients, the efficacy of laparoscopic myomectomy versus abdominal myomectomy, in restoring fertility and to evaluate the obstetric outcomes. Between January 1993 and January 1998, 131 patients of reproductive age, with anamnesis of infertility, underwent myomectomy because of the presence of at least one large myoma (diameter greater than or = 5 cm). Patients were randomly selected for treatment by laparotomy (n = 65) or laparoscopy (n = 66). The two groups were homogeneous for number, size and position of large myomata. Significant differences were found in the post-operative outcome: febrile morbidity (> 38 degrees C) was more frequent in the abdominal than in the laparoscopic group (26.2 versus 12.1%; P < 0.05). Laparotomy caused a more pronounced haemoglobin drop (2.17 +/- 1.57 versus 1.33 +/- 1.23; P < 0.001); three patients received a blood transfusion after laparotomy and none after laparoscopy. The post-operative hospital stay was shorter in the laparoscopic group (142.80 +/- 34.60 versus 75.61 +/- 37.09 h; P < 0.001). No significant differences were found between the two groups as concerns pregnancy rate (55.9% after laparotomy, 53.6% after laparoscopy), abortion rate (12.1 versus 20%), preterm delivery (7.4 versus 5%) and the use of Caesarean section (77.8 versus 65%). No case of uterine rupture during pregnancy or labour was observed.

391 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In order to evaluate the relationship between leiomyomas and infertility, which remains a subject of debate, Medline research was conducted of publications appearing between January 1988 and August 2001 and their impact on fertility and pregnancy outcome in infertile women.
Abstract: In order to evaluate the relationship between leiomyomas and infertility, which remains a subject of debate, we have tried to evaluate the impact of myomas on fertility and pregnancy outcome in different conditions where myomas are implicated. Medline research was conducted of publications appearing between January 1988 and August 2001 on the subjects of myomas and myomectomy and their impact on fertility and pregnancy outcome in infertile women. A total of 106 manuscripts were consulted. The incidence of myomas in infertile women without any obvious cause of infertility is estimated to be 1-2.4%. The relationship between leiomyomas and infertility remains a subject of debate. The question is: do myomas influence fertility? We are obliged to conclude that the question remains. The absence of an answer to this crucial question is probably due to the fact that we have not yet conducted the appropriate prospective studies required to obtain any clear results.

340 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Pregnancy and implantation rates were significantly lower in the groups of patients with intramural and submucosal fibroids, even when there was no deformation of the uterine cavity, according to a retrospective comparative study.

275 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The complication rate appears to be better than acceptable in comparison with complication rates reported after laparotomic myomectomies, and can be considered a safe technique with an extremely low failure rate and good results in terms of pregnancy outcome.

267 citations