Login / Signup

Correlation between hysterosalpingography diagnosis and final hysterolaparoscopy with dye-test diagnosis in women with utero-tubal infertility: A cross-sectional study of the implication for which test should be the first-line investigation.

Emeka Philip IgbodikeOlusegun Olalekan BadejokoOlusola Benjamin FasubaaBolanle Olubunmi IbitoyeOlabisi Morebise LotoJoseph Ifeanyichukwu IkechebeluGeorge Uchenna ElejeArinze Anthony OnwuegbunaBoniface Chukwuneme OkpalaOsita Samuel UmeononihuOnyecherelam Monday Ogelle
Published in: SAGE open medicine (2022)
Hysterosalpingography detects tubal blockade and intrauterine pathology poorly compared to hysterolaparoscopy with dye test. Hysterosalpingography may face unpredictable clinical situations biased by technological error, leading to unsuccessful evaluation and uncertain diagnosis. Although the cost-effectiveness, risk of surgery or anaesthesia flaws hysterolaparoscopy with dye test. Hysterosalpingography should not be the first-line utero-tubal assessment tool rather hysterolaparoscopy with dye test.
Keyphrases
  • highly efficient
  • minimally invasive
  • type diabetes
  • risk factors
  • coronary artery disease
  • skeletal muscle
  • atrial fibrillation
  • visible light