In patients with vesicouterine fistula (VUF), identification of the fistulous tract during laparoscopic surgery remains difficult. Hysterography and intravesical instillation of dye have been the traditional methods for diagnosing VUF; now, they have been supplanted by ultrasonography, CT, and/or MRI. Unfortunately, none of the above mentioned investigations aid in identification of the fistulous tract during laparoscopic surgery or ease laparoscopic dissection. We describe a simple procedure, which we term cystohysteroscopy, that aids the diagnosis of VUF and also simplifies laparoscopic dissection. A guidewire/ureteral catheter is coiled in the uterine cavity through the fistulous tract with the help of a cystoscope. By cystohysteroscopy, this guidewire/ureteral catheter is pulled out through the vagina using a semirigid ureteroscope. The advantage of cystohysteroscopy is that the presence of the guidewire/ureteral catheter across the fistulous tract aids laparoscopic dissection even in the presence of fibrosis and can be used for traction/manipulation during dissection in the vesicouterine area. This is the first report in the literature depicting the use of a semirigid ureteroscope for the purpose of cystohysteroscopy.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/end.2010.0603 | DOI Listing |
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