Is there a state-of-the-art abortion procedure?

  In family planning clinics, patients often say, “I want the most advanced abortion method, do you have ultra-guided visual abortion, do you have hysteroscopic abortion, do you have directional suction, only the fetal sac but not the lining?” When I answered no, I was often booed as to why there is no market for the “advanced” abortion methods that many hospitals advertise so heavily in the larger hospitals.  Let the embryo speak for itself here about its growth in the uterus and its situation during the abortion procedure. After the fertilized egg finds a foothold in the uterus, it will settle there and then the endometrium here will thicken to nourish the embryo, part of it will wrap around the surface of the fertilized egg and part of it will spread out like a small grass with roots in the fertile endometrium to form the placenta, and another part will gradually develop into a baby.  Under the beautiful lens, the part of the fertilized egg that develops into a baby and the endometrium that covers it can be seen, while the roots of the fertilized egg that absorbs nutrients will not be visible at all underneath it.  The abortion begins, and in order to cut off the roots, the doctor has to suck out not only the baby part, but also the roots, and even the thickened fertile land, so that the uterus can return to its normal state as soon as possible.  Some people are worried that comprehensive suction will lead to thinning of the uterine lining, in fact, the endometrium is divided into two layers, the upper layer is called the functional layer, which is shed once per menstruation, and the lower layer is called the basal layer, the basal layer will thicken and transform into a functional layer after the functional layer is shed, and so on in this cycle. The abortion procedure mainly deals with the functional layer, but of course, because there is no boundary between the two layers, it will more or less affect the basal layer below.  This is why abortion is a passive procedure that can be done without, or with less. No surgeon, no technique, no high technology has the ability to distinguish between the two layers of the lining.  Once the procedure of abortion starts, the fertilized egg in the uterus is sucked out, the blood vessels under the endometrium will open up and bleed, at this point trying to look at the uterine cavity and spotting for the operation is basically a pipe dream, a bloody mess under the hysteroscope head.  Currently, the more reliable procedure is the ultrasound-guided one, because the ultrasound is outside the uterus and it can guide the surgeon to locate the part of the fetal sac that is in the bed and focus on scraping. It is also less affected by uterine bleeding and allows the endometrial condition to be seen after the curettage. It is more operable in practice. The operation method will be affirmed both at home and abroad.  So dear sufferers, don’t come back to ask whether there is a high-tech abortion method. Consult your doctor well on how to choose a contraceptive method, stay away from abortion, and live a healthy life.