Guest guest Posted May 7, 2004 Report Share Posted May 7, 2004 Hi everybody: Has anyone chose not to do surgery or other invasive tx. for their fibroids until they reach menopause? If so, what were your experiences (terrible symptoms persisted until menopause, then got better and bleeding stopped?) I am scheduling surgery for June (hysteroscopic resection). I am terrified. I only ever had a tonsillectomy. Deathly afraid of anesthesia too. Once an organ is operated on I believe it will never be the same. I'm 45 - had my fibroids for the past 2 yrs. On lupron for the past 6 months until surgery. Should I just ride this out until menopause? Thanks for any info. Jeanne Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 7, 2004 Report Share Posted May 7, 2004 Hi, A resection is very simple surgery with most women reporting no pain after. Many go out to eat the same night and resume normal activities right away. Being afraid is NORMAL. Many have said that the fear before their myo was far worse than the myo itself. You might want to ask for something to settle your stomach in the IV. Sometimes anesthesia can make you naucious after. Anesthesia is very safe. Often they measure your brain waves now to make sure your fully uncoucious during surgery and they don't give you too much. What does it feel like? Once they give you the injection, you're out. Then the next thing you know is that you are waking up. You have no sense of time passing. Fibroids only get worse, not better. Average age for menopause to start is 51. You may have a while to wait before menopause would shrink your fibroids. I couldn't wait, I was a bleeder. It depends on your symptoms and if you can take them. Also remember, while you wait, fibroids get bigger. It's easier to take them out if they're small. They can take out big ones, it's just a little harder. I'd choose the resection and just get rid of it. My docs didn't catch my fibroid in time for a resection. I had to have a myo. I could have had a resection if they had caught it early. Watching and waiting isn't always the best option. So keep this in mind. You may be trading simple surgery for more complex surgery later. I don't regret my myo. It gave me my life back. I only regret that I didn't have surgery sooner. Ku Jeanne JKiewlak@...> wrote: I am scheduling surgery for June (hysteroscopic resection). Once an organ is operated on I believe it will never be the same. I'm 45 - had my fibroids for the past 2 yrs. On lupron for the past 6 months until surgery. Should I just ride this out until menopause? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 7, 2004 Report Share Posted May 7, 2004 Ku, This is a question indeed, not a statement. What stats do we have that fibroids always get worse, never better? I have heard of some getting better even with no therapy, but this is a miracle, I'm sure. The question I have is, are there stats to prove that fibroids always get worse, never stay the status quo? Perhaps this is what she was asking and would interest me as well. I'm not talking about what we often read (the stories of those who get worse), but actual stats. Does anyone have any stats or are these stats out there on this subject? Thanks. Meg -- In uterinefibroids , kukalaka wrote: > Fibroids only get worse, not better. Average age for menopause to start is 51. You may have a while to wait before menopause would shrink your fibroids. I couldn't wait, I was a bleeder. It depends on your symptoms and if you can take them. Also remember, while you wait, fibroids get bigger. It's easier to take them out if they're small. They can take out big ones, it's just a little harder. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 7, 2004 Report Share Posted May 7, 2004 Ku, This is a question indeed, not a statement. What stats do we have that fibroids always get worse, never better? I have heard of some getting better even with no therapy, but this is a miracle, I'm sure. The question I have is, are there stats to prove that fibroids always get worse, never stay the status quo? Perhaps this is what she was asking and would interest me as well. I'm not talking about what we often read (the stories of those who get worse), but actual stats. Does anyone have any stats or are these stats out there on this subject? Thanks. Meg -- In uterinefibroids , kukalaka wrote: > Fibroids only get worse, not better. Average age for menopause to start is 51. You may have a while to wait before menopause would shrink your fibroids. I couldn't wait, I was a bleeder. It depends on your symptoms and if you can take them. Also remember, while you wait, fibroids get bigger. It's easier to take them out if they're small. They can take out big ones, it's just a little harder. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 7, 2004 Report Share Posted May 7, 2004 Ku, This is a question indeed, not a statement. What stats do we have that fibroids always get worse, never better? I have heard of some getting better even with no therapy, but this is a miracle, I'm sure. The question I have is, are there stats to prove that fibroids always get worse, never stay the status quo? Perhaps this is what she was asking and would interest me as well. I'm not talking about what we often read (the stories of those who get worse), but actual stats. Does anyone have any stats or are these stats out there on this subject? Thanks. Meg -- In uterinefibroids , kukalaka wrote: > Fibroids only get worse, not better. Average age for menopause to start is 51. You may have a while to wait before menopause would shrink your fibroids. I couldn't wait, I was a bleeder. It depends on your symptoms and if you can take them. Also remember, while you wait, fibroids get bigger. It's easier to take them out if they're small. They can take out big ones, it's just a little harder. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 8, 2004 Report Share Posted May 8, 2004 I agree that fibroids don't necessarily have to get worse. Mine has stopped growing. It's been in a holding pattern for months now. But.... that doesn't mean the fibroid has gotten better. It just means it hasn't gotten any worse. That's what watching and waiting is all about. You play russian roulette fibroid style. If you win, you get to menopause and the fibroid shrinks. And you have a plan in mind should fibroids decide to grow again, bleeding takes off, etc. before you reach menopause. Know your options, have a plan, and go with your gut feeling. So far, I'm winning. At 53 and skipping periods, I'm definitely on my way to menopause. Will I make it? I hope so, but only my fibroid knows for sure. Gerri -- In uterinefibroids , " abtan2 " wrote: > This is a question indeed, not a statement. What stats do we have > that fibroids always get worse, never better? I have heard of some getting better even with no therapy, but this is a miracle, I'm > sure. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 8, 2004 Report Share Posted May 8, 2004 I agree that fibroids don't necessarily have to get worse. Mine has stopped growing. It's been in a holding pattern for months now. But.... that doesn't mean the fibroid has gotten better. It just means it hasn't gotten any worse. That's what watching and waiting is all about. You play russian roulette fibroid style. If you win, you get to menopause and the fibroid shrinks. And you have a plan in mind should fibroids decide to grow again, bleeding takes off, etc. before you reach menopause. Know your options, have a plan, and go with your gut feeling. So far, I'm winning. At 53 and skipping periods, I'm definitely on my way to menopause. Will I make it? I hope so, but only my fibroid knows for sure. Gerri -- In uterinefibroids , " abtan2 " wrote: > This is a question indeed, not a statement. What stats do we have > that fibroids always get worse, never better? I have heard of some getting better even with no therapy, but this is a miracle, I'm > sure. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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