No more surgery! . - Book Corners - Healing Fibroids: A Doctor’s Guide to A Natural Cure

Healing Fibroids: A Doctor’s Guide to A Natural Cure

by Allan Warshowaky, MD and Elena Oumano, PhD

Simon & Schuster, Inc., Rockefeller Center, 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10020 USA

Paperback, 2002, $14US/$21.50 CAN, 281 pp.

One of the most intractable of all women’s health complaints, fibroid tumors, is routinely “treated” by surgical removal of the tumor, and more often, hysterectomy is recommended. Among women of childbearing age, the incidence of fibroids is 25 to 40%, presenting women with hard choices — one of which is the possibility of being unable to have children. Some women with fibroids have no symptoms, while others suffer from a myriad of complaints, including lower abdominal pain and pressure, heavy menstrual bleeding, infertility, miscarriages, anemia, and bladder irritation and infections. Fibroids can grow in many different locations around and in the uterus, and range in size from barely perceptible to the size of a grapefruit. Fibroid tumors can be an endless source of pain, bleeding, and frustration.

In Part 1, “The Basics,” the authors explain what is known about this difficult health problem. No one really knows what causes fibroids but it is suspected that long-standing disturbances that create hormonal imbalances may be at the root of this condition. It is known that estrogen stimulates fibroid growth, opening the door to speculation about environmental sources.

After a review of the many negative effects of hysterectomy, some of the new “more limited surgical procedures” are looked at including one in which I took a personal interest. Myomectomy: “This procedure is viewed by many in the medical field as heroic because it involves removing the fibroid only and therefore should not interfere with the woman’s ability to have children. Yet this surgically conservative operation is more difficult than a hysterectomy so it must be performed by a highly skilled surgeon.” There were some drawbacks listed like not preventing fibroids from growing back. What was so interesting to me is that 40 years ago, I was diagnosed with a large fibroid growing through the wall of the uterus. My Ob/Gyn was a well-known doctor in the Seattle area, and without discussing it with me in advance, spent considerable time in the operating room removing the tumor and repairing the wall of the uterus. He was certainly a man ahead of his time, and one of the best doctors I have ever known.

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