Indications and contraindications for obstetrical and gynecological interventions

  Indications.
  1.Benign obstetrical and gynecological diseases 
  (1) Postpartum hemorrhage.
  (2) Uterine fibroids.
  (3) adenomyosis (tumors) of the uterus.
  (4) ectopic pregnancy (including tubal pregnancy, cervical/angular pregnancy and incisional pregnancy, etc.)
  (5) placental implantation or residual after medical abortion
  (6) Bleeding after gynecological surgery and trauma.
  (7) Uterine arteriovenous fistula/malformation.
  (8) Pelvic venous congestion syndrome PVCS (pelvic stasis syndrome)
  (9) tubal interventions for tubal infertility (including SSG+FTR) to unblock the fallopian tubes
  (10) tubal interventional embolization (to improve the success rate of IVF in patients with hydrosalpinx and to reduce the risk of ectopic pregnancy).
  2.Gynecologic malignancies (cervical cancer, endometrial cancer, choriocarcinoma, ovarian cancer, vulvar cancer, vaginal cancer, etc.)
  (1) Pre-operative neoadjuvant chemotherapy for gynecologic malignant tumors (to reduce tumor stage and to give surgery to those without surgical indications)
  (2) palliative treatment for postoperative recurrence of gynecologic malignant tumors
  (3) Hemostasis of bleeding due to gynecologic malignant tumors and post-radiotherapy complications.
  (4) arteriovenous fistulae caused by gynecologic malignancies.
  Contraindications.
  1, infection at the puncture site.
  2.Severe coagulation mechanism abnormalities.
  3, acute or subacute gynecological inflammation not controlled.
  (4) Severe dysfunction of the heart, liver, kidney and other vital organs.
  Advantages.
  1.Little trauma.
  2, fast recovery.
  3.Less complications.
  4, outpatient treatment, few days of hospitalization or with clinical effective shortening of hospitalization days.
  5.No scars on the abdomen, which does not hinder the beauty of the abdomen.