Ectopic pregnancy surgery is general or semi-anesthesia

Ectopic pregnancy surgery requires general anesthesia if it is laparoscopic surgery. Laparoscopic surgery requires the injection of carbon dioxide gas into the abdominal cavity to make the abdomen expand, which requires the relaxation of the abdominal muscles under general anesthesia so that the surgery can be completed successfully. If it is an open surgery, you can choose general anesthesia or semi-anesthesia. Patients under general anesthesia are asleep, while patients under semi-anesthesia are awake, but regardless of whether it is general or semi-anesthesia, the patient’s site of surgery is painless. The good location for ectopic pregnancy is the fallopian tube, and you can either have a tubal incision to retrieve the embryo or choose to remove the fallopian tube, but these two procedures need to be determined according to the intraoperative situation. If the site of ectopic pregnancy has ruptured, the fallopian tube must be removed. If the site of ectopic pregnancy has not ruptured, the fallopian tube can be preserved after the embryo is removed.