The study was sufficiently large to indicate an association between the techniques used for laparoscopic hysterectomy, particularly those used to secure the ovarian blood vessels, and the risk of subsequent major complications. These results should be confirmed by others.
What is already known on this topic
Hysterectomy is one of the most often performed of all major surgical operations
It has traditionally been performed by either the vaginal or the abdominal method
Either method has advantages and disadvantages, but the indications for each remain controversial and have never been compared in a randomised controlled trial
More recently a third method of hysterectomy has been developed, laparoscopic hysterectomy
What this study adds
Two parallel trials compared the new technique oflaparoscopic hysterectomy to the traditional vaginal and the abdominal method
The results confirm the advantages to the patient of avoiding a laparotomy incision
In the abdominal trial laparoscopic hysterectomy was associated with a clinically relevant higher incidence of major complications and took longer to perform than the abdominal method
With laparoscopic hysterectomy, patients have less pain, shorter hospital stay, quicker recovery, and improved quality of life indicators in the short term
Vaginal hysterectomy is quicker than laparoscopic hysterectomy
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