If the tubal effusion has no obvious clinical symptoms and there is no need for fertility, no special treatment is needed. If acute infection requires drug treatment, and if necessary, surgical treatment.
1. Medication: If the tubal effusion is caused by acute tubal infection, it can be treated with antibiotic medication, oral ofloxacin, metronidazole, or intramuscular injection of ceftriaxone sodium, cefoxitin sodium, etc., and the more serious symptoms can be injected intravenously with cefotetan, cefoxitin sodium and so on.
2. Surgery: For mild hydrosalpinx and fertility needs, laparoscopic salpingo-oophorectomy can be performed. For those with severe hydrocele, tubectomy can be performed. Tubal ligation can be performed for tubal hydrosalpinx less than 3 centimeters, but severe pelvic adhesions are present.
If you have hydrocele, it is recommended that you consult a doctor in a timely manner, complete the relevant examinations, and under the guidance of a professional doctor, identify the cause of the disease and actively target treatment, so as to avoid delaying the condition. The use of the above medications should be in accordance with medical advice.