Hystero-salpingo scintigraphy: a routine investigation in sterile women?

1995 
Based on the spontaneous migration of radioactive tracer from the posterior vaginal fornix to the ovaries and peritoneal cavity, several attempts were made to assess hystero-salpingo scintigraphy (HSS). The low acceptance rate by sterile women of routine investigation of tubal function may be due to a fear of radiation exposure and unpleasant examination procedures. Our protocol for HSS adopts a low dose of radioactive tracer (0.2-0.3 mCi), a defined mode of application (between the external and internal os of the cervical canal) and a short imaging time (60 min). From 1990 to 1992, we investigated 60 fallopian tubes in 32 sterile women by HSS, hystero-salpingography (HSG) and/or chromoperturbation during laparoscopy (LPSC). The results of HSG and HSS corresponded in 15 of 49 fallopian tubes, LPSC and HSS in 9 of 24. None of the 32 patients had become prdgnant naturally during the average observation period of 17 months. Two patients became pregnant after in-vitro fertilization. HSS, performed according to our protocol, causes less pain and results in a lower dose of radiation than HSG (about 50%). It is well accepted by patients and is easy to perform. As an investigation of tubal function, HSS may serve as an additional examination technique in cases of presumed tubal sterility
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