Type of Surgery
Information

Last updated: 11/24/2009
There are some alternative procedures that are offered for treating specific birth defects, depending on their severity. Fetal surgery is generally recommended only for the most severe defects. For example, myelomeningocele may be treated by closing...
of the lesion soon after delivery. SCTs and CCAMs may also be removed soon after the baby is born. Parents are often given the option of aborting the fetus (termed therapeutic abortion); or they may decide to refrain from medical intervention.
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Slide show describing the surgeries available to treat fetuses in the womb and some of the problems that can be treated with fetal surgery and heart malformations, neural tube defects, and gastrointestinal tract deformities.
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Other Information
Open fetal surgery is an invasive form of fetal intervention in the treatment of birth defects where the pregnant uterus is opened up for direct surgery on the fetus.
Open fetal surgery is similar in many respects to a normal cesarean section performed under general anesthesia, except that the fetus remains dependent on the placenta and is returned to the uterus. A hysterotomy is performed on the pregnant woman. Once the uterus is open and the fetus is exposed, the fetal surgery begins. Typically, this surgery consists of an interim procedure intended to allow the fetus to remain in utero until it has matured enough to survive delivery and neonatal surgical procedures. Upon completion of the fetal surgery, the fetus is put back inside the uterus and the uterus and abdominal wall are closed up.
The mother remains in the hospital for 3-7 days for monitoring and is required to subsequently deliver the baby via a second cesarean section. Often babies who have been operated on in this manner are born pre-term.
Open fetal surgery has proven to be reasonably safe for the mother. For the fetus, safety and effectiveness are variable, and depend on the specific procedure, the reasons for the procedure, and the gestational age and condition of the fetus.
Other Information
An obstetrician/gynecologist, commonly abbreviated as OB/GYN, can serve as a primary physician and often serve as consultants to other physicians.
From: womenshealthchannel.com
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