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Hello All:

Schizophrenia is a pretty good way to describe the medical profession & their

approach to fibroids.

The first 2 gyns who saw me for my fibroids tried to convince me that I'd

better get a hysterectomy or suffer horrible consequences including a slow,

extremely painful death from cancer. The second gyn also made a very big

issue over my anemia. Guess they couldn't see past the dollar signs in front

of their greedy eyes!

I have been trying to find an IR give me a consult for UFE. And of course my

insurance company isn't being too cooperative either. Surprise, surprise! As

soon as my insurance company denied coverage for UFE due to failure to

justify need for the procedure, the first IR more or less told me that maybe

I should just live with my symptoms as they weren't that severe and I was 51

and approaching menopause anyway.....Who do I believe, the doctors who think

I'm on Death's Door or the guy who thinks my symptoms are relatively mild? Am

I missing the point here, or are the doctors basing my care or lack of care

due to the amount of money they think they can get out of me and my insurance

company?

I tried to see another IR last week but that experience left me so depressed

that I am taking a vacation from doctors, at least for now. I had so hoped to

have this procedure behind by the end of the year, but don't think that's

going to happen.

Liz

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I'm new to the group and I find it great. Congratulations everyone on

an excellent egroup. I first discovered I had a fibroid about a year

ago. The first thing that struck me was the medical profession's

schizophrenia on the condition. On the one hand they were saying 30 per

cent of women over 40 have them and its nothing to worry about and on

the other hand it was, oh if they contribute to heavy periods or grow

enormous, there's really nothing for it but a hysterectomy.

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I took three 200mg iron tablets a day for anaemia of 9.7 grammes of

haemoglobin per litre of blood (as opposed to normal level of 12 grammes per

litre) and within a couple of months the anaemia was gone.

Now the heavy periods have gone too. A D & C can establish whether a fibroid

is contributing to heavy periods or not. Basically if it sticks inward,

rather than out, it will have more effect because it increases the surface

area of the uterine lining. A fibroid between the uterine lining and the

wall, rather than in the wall, has most effect on menstruation.

I am in the process of changing my doctor. One that is willing to terrorise

me to promote a treatment I don't want as a life-style improvement is a

health hazard more than anything. Think of all the stress they cause.

For me the important distinction is between life-threatening and quality of

life. Only a directly and immediately life-threatening condition such as a

cancer, for which there is no alternative treatment, would prompt me to have

a hysterectomy and I pray I am never in that situation.

My sense is that surgery in such an interior organ is not a simple matter

and I am wary of considering any major surgical op for any condition that

affects my quality of life but does not threaten my life.

If my heavy periods had continued I would have put up with the inconvenience

and iron pills and need to keep equipped for menstrual emergencies. It is a

drag but not that bad and I would be in one piece and not putting my body at

risk by potentially hazardous treatments.

After the menopause fibroids do shrink because they are no longer fed by

oestrogen, so if one can get away with just leaving them that seems to me

personally the better option.

Better still if one can find some way to address the hormonal imbalance that

apparently causes them and prevent them growing. Some fibroids are stable at

a given size and others can grow very fast, I understand.

Where the borderline lies between quality of life and life-threatening, I

don't know. A fast-growing enormous fibroid presumably would be

life-threatening. Bigger ones presumably cause more pressure pains and

perhaps affect the bladder and bowel. Everyone's threshold of pain and

discomfort is different, so I suppose it would be very much a personal

judgement.

But this UFE thing sounds worth knowing more about and I await Carla

Dionne's write-up on it with interest.

Re: polyp/hysterectomy

>Hello All:

>

>Schizophrenia is a pretty good way to describe the medical profession &

their

>approach to fibroids.

>

>The first 2 gyns who saw me for my fibroids tried to convince me that I'd

>better get a hysterectomy or suffer horrible consequences including a slow,

>extremely painful death from cancer. The second gyn also made a very big

>issue over my anemia. Guess they couldn't see past the dollar signs in

front

>of their greedy eyes!

>

>I have been trying to find an IR give me a consult for UFE. And of course

my

>insurance company isn't being too cooperative either. Surprise, surprise!

As

>soon as my insurance company denied coverage for UFE due to failure to

>justify need for the procedure, the first IR more or less told me that

maybe

>I should just live with my symptoms as they weren't that severe and I was

51

>and approaching menopause anyway.....Who do I believe, the doctors who

think

>I'm on Death's Door or the guy who thinks my symptoms are relatively mild?

Am

>I missing the point here, or are the doctors basing my care or lack of care

>due to the amount of money they think they can get out of me and my

insurance

>company?

>

>I tried to see another IR last week but that experience left me so

depressed

>that I am taking a vacation from doctors, at least for now. I had so hoped

to

>have this procedure behind by the end of the year, but don't think that's

>going to happen.

>

>Liz

>

>------------------------------------------------------------------------

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>Weatherize Your Home. Learn2 Speak Wine. Learn2 Get by in French.

>Learn2 Negotiate a Raise. http://clickhere./click/965

>

>

>

>eGroups.com home: /group/uterinefibroids

> - Simplifying group communications

>

>

>

>

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Liz: I know exactly how you feel. In August my hemoglobin was 5.9 and

I was told I needed an immediate hysterectomy; there were no other

options. I too am 51 and was hoping to hit menopause and the fibroids

would shrink. Thanks to this eGroup, I learned about UAE and am now in

contact with an IR to do the UAE. Just got off the phone with him and

he is contacting my insurance company to see if they will cover the

procedure. I saw 2 gyns and they both felt that AT MY AGE a hyst was

the only option since I would not need any of those female organs

anyway. Hopefully, things will work out. I've already had a myo but

the fibroids came back.

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