Yes, with the proper coaxing.
If the fibroid is perfectly rectangular, then the area of one of its surfaces is 50.76 cm. That is large for a uterine fibroid.
Uterine fibroid embolization is non-surgical removal of the growths through the use of a tubular device called a catheter.
Although uterine fibroid embolization is an outpatient procedure, patients may stay in a recovery area for up to 23 hours.
27mm x 21mm
Uterine fibroid embolization, also known asuterine artery embolization, is performed by an interventional radiologist, a physician who is trained to perform this and other types of embolization and minimally invasive procedures. It is performed while the patient is conscious, but sedated and feeling no pain. It does not require general anesthesia. The interventional radiologist makes a tiny nick in the skin in the groin and inserts a catheter into the femoral artery. Using real-time imaging, the physician guides the catheter through the artery and then releases tiny particles, the size of grains of sand, into the uterine arteries that supply blood to the fibroid tumor. This blocks the blood flow to the fibroid tumor and causes it to shrink and die. http://www.vascularaccesscenters.com/ufe.asp
Uterine fibroids are benign growths of the muscle. It originates from the smooth muscle, and is non-cancerous tumor inside the uterus.
Usually not. A fibroid should be a round mass in the wall of the uterus. A dead fetus would not be round and would be in the uterine cavity.
You should discuss this with your doctor or even a hospital if you can not reach your doctor.
if you have uterine fibroid tumors and leukorrhea has occured, can it still be cured my discharge is out of control
Most doctor do not think a myomectomy is necessary with a small fibroid on the outside of the uterus, and 3 cm is considered small. However, occasionally removal of a small fibroid that is in the inside lining of the uterus may help you get pregnant.
An intramural myoma is a uterine fibroid. This is basically a noncancerous tumor that is found in the uterus of the female reproductive organ.
a relatively new, less-invasive procedure in which blood vessels that feed the fibroids are blocked, causing the growths to shrink.