Tubal Ligation Reversal

Chapel Hill Tubal Reversal Center.

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Dr. Charles Monteith, Tubal Reversal Surgeon

Interview with Dr. Charles Monteith
Tubal Reversal Surgeon at Chapel Hill Tubal Reversal Center

Charles Monteith, M.D. speaks about his education, training, and certifications. Dr. Monteith says he currently performs tubal reversals eight to twelve a week and the reasons women mention for wanting to have their tubes reversed. He says these include a new partner, or people have just changed their minds and decide they want to have more children. He adds a lot of women have experienced changes in their bodily functions after tubal ligation, and that patients refer to this as Post Tubal Ligation Syndrome.


Transcript of Video Interview With Dr. Monteith

Interviewer: Can you tell us about your medical school and residency training?

Dr. Monteith: I went to medical school in San Francisco, University of California in San Francisco and finished my MD degree there and then subsequently returned to the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill to do my obstetrics and gynecology residency.

Interviewer: How long have you been performing reproductive surgery?

Dr. Monteith:I have been performing Gyn. surgery since 1997 but as of a year and a half ago dedicated myself exclusively to working with Dr. Berger and doing tubal reversal surgery.

Interviewer: And before you started working with Dr. Berger did women frequently ask for tubal reversal procedures was that something that something that came in your practice prior?

Dr. Monteith: As a generalist I did not see a lot of women that requested tubal surgery. However, our practice was a majority of young pregnant women. So I didn’t get a fair assessment of how many women were out there that wanted to have tubal ligations reversed. However I did have a partner that did perform exclusive GYN services she fairly often had requests or inquiries about tubal reversal surgery.

Interviewer: What made you pursue a certification in tubal reversal?

Dr. Monteith: I think I had had practiced high risk obstetrics and gynecology for a good seven years after I finished my residency and just one day I realized I needed to change what I was doing or I wasn’t going to last very long doing it. The way medicine has become is very high volume very stressful and little time with patients. I felt like I really wasn’t helping people to the best of my ability. Patients would come they would go. They would their insurance and have to go find another provider. People would come with job movement in the middle of pregnancy or leave in the middle of pregnancy and I just found that I didn’t get a lot of personal fulfillment out of it. I especially like my role as a tubal reversal provider because I like I’m being with a physician is supposed to be. I’m using my skills to help people to the best of my ability. And I especially feel because it’s not a widely offered service that I’m doing even better for a lot of women.

Interviewer: How many reversals do you perform each week?

Dr. Monteith: On average about eight to twelve a week currently.

Interviewer: What are some of the reasons women mention for wanting to have their tubes reversed?

Dr. Monteith: It seems like the most common reason is basically none of us can predict the future and most commonly it seems women find themselves in new relationships. Usually it is bad marriages, separations and divorce. And they find themselves with a new partner and just very strongly they would like to have children together. A close second to that would be to people that have just changed their minds and decide they want to have more children. And then a lot of women have experienced changes in their bodily functions after tubal ligation.

Interviewer: Are you referring to Post Tubal Ligation Syndrome?

Dr. Monteith- Ah yes, what most patients refer to as Post Tubal Ligation Syndrome.

Interviewer: And how frequently do you hear that as a condition that women feel they have developed?

Dr. Monteith- We hear it very commonly. There are probably a lot of women who come through here that never voice it or share it. But, at least in my experience here, I see a patient at least once a day if not every other day that has experienced worsened menstrual symptoms or bodily functions after a tubal ligation procedure.

Interviewer: And how much follow-up or are you able to follow-up after the surgery to see if that has improved?

Dr. Monteith: I am in the process of doing that now. Last year, we did a small case study on five women that had tubal ligations and experienced Post Tubal Ligation Syndrome. This summer it will be a full year and thus far in talking with them it seems at least about 70% of them have gotten better. Very frequently I am amazed that women post on the message board how much improvement they feel after they have reversal surgery.

Interviewer: How much contact do you have with patients after their reversal surgery?

Dr. Monteith: Most patients come from long distances so there is not a lot of direct contact but the most amazing thing is our tubal reversal patients seem to keep close contact by email and through electronic means. So, we hear from a large number of our patients.

Interviewer: What’s the best part of tubal reversal surgery and what you’re doing currently?

Dr. Monteith: The best part is really just using my skills to help a woman, a couple or a family to achieve what they would otherwise not be able to achieve and that is to add more children to their family or their relationship. Or to improve their perceptions about their body.

Interviewer: What do you like about Chapel Hill Tubal Reversal Center?

Dr. Monteith: The thing I like the most about this center and I come from my experience of working a large university and also from working at a large good quality hospital in Raleigh is that this center works with amazing efficiency. We take great care of patients. The staff seems to be real happy and motivated. And we are all dedicated to doing just one thing and that’s tubal surgery. And it feels good to work in a place with such high efficiency for the betterment of patients.

Interviewer: How does Chapel Hill compare to the in patient care of a hospital?

Dr. Monteith: There about the same as some of the best hospitals I have worked at and probably even better. Mainly because we are all focused on one thing and the staff really knows their jobs. And we are all dedicated to making that one goal happen, and that’s safe outpatient tubal repair surgery.

More Information about Dr. Monteith

Monday, July 20, 2009

The Cost Of Tubal Reversal Surgery

For many women and couples who are looking into tubal reversal surgery the cost is a big issue. In these hard economical times everyone is trying to cut corners. There are some surgeons that are very expensive and some do charge less for the tubal reversal surgery.

One of the biggest things to watch for when comparing the prices for surgery is that the price may be lower until you add in the other expenses. What many have been doing is stating a low price and then after adding in the price of the anesthesiologist and the hospital stay, which ends up being very expensive. Many do not realize this until they think they have all the money saved for the surgery and then go to a consult with the surgeon who will be performing the tubal reversal surgery and then are told the added in charges.

Read the rest of this article

Good Financial News for Tubal Reversal Surgery
Women desiring tubal reversal often find themselves being financially creative. The cost of tubal ligation reversal can range from $5400 to over $25,000, depending on where the operation is perform. Chapel Hill Tubal Reversal Center keeps the cost for tubal reversal to the absolute minimum to help women be able to afford the operation that will allow them to have more children. Many women wanting a baby after a tubal ligation share their ideas on the Tubal Reversal Message Board for overcoming the financial obstacles to having this life-giving procedure.

Friday, July 17, 2009

Tubal Ligation Side Effects

If you have been doing research about having your tubes tied before having the surgery, then you are smart. Most women, however, don't do any research. They just know it's the most popular form of permanent birth control and just go for it. After all their doctors have told them it's popular and completely safe. Unfortunately, many of them find out later, after the symptoms start, about some tubal ligation side effects called Post Tubal Ligation Syndrome.

But let's say you are looking for information ahead of the surgery and you have run across mention of post tubal ligation syndrome. Doesn't sound like much fun, does it? So you are probably wondering just who is at risk of suffering from this condition and what causes it. If you have already had your tubes tied and are suffering it, you may also want to know what can be done to relieve the problem which is below.

Who is at risk?

Risk factors that some study has been done on resolve down to two things - what type of tubal ligation you have and your age.

In an interview at the International Pelvic Pain Society conference with Dr. Ahmed El-Minawi, Ph.D., we learn that women who have had what he calls more destructive forms of having their tubes tied are the ones at higher risk to suffer from ptls. The methods which cause the most damage to the mid-segment of the fallopian tubes such as with the Pomeroy or Irving-type procedures fall in this category. Also included are the coagulation methods with a bi-polar coagulation, or as we laymen call it, cauterization, being the more destructive.

Additionally, women who are in the 20s when they have their tubes tied are at greater risk of having menstrual disorders. That's from one study which looked at women who had tubal ligation vs. those who did not and who ended up in the hospital with menstrual disorders. Women in their 20s were 6 times more likely to go. To put it another way, that's 600% over the normal population.

While looking at the above two paragraphs might make you think, "Hey, I'll just wait till I am 30." and to be sure to get rings or clips to tie your tubes, that just is no guarantee that you won't get post tubal ligation syndrome. Why? Well, that leads to the next part.

What causes post tubal ligation syndrome?

This part I have to start with a warning. We really don't know what causes ptls at this point in time. It really needs research, real studies, by researchers who don't go into these studies with the idea that ptls doesn't exist. I've read some of the abstracts and conclusions of studies already done and even when a study shows that something is going on, it's discounted on various grounds. As the old saying goes, "I'll see it when I believe it." Personally, I have just read too much from women who are suffering from post tubal ligation syndrome not to believe something is going on.

So the present theories, including from one doctor who was involved in this field for ten years, is that when the tubes are tied, the blood supply to the ovaries is damaged. It can even be cut off entirely which can cause ovarian isolation which leads to atrophied ovaries. When either of these happen, your body isn't going to get the right amounts of the hormones you need. Or you can get the right amount of one and not enough of another leading to hormonal imbalance.

The other theory is that even when the blood supply is just fine, damage is done to the receptor cells which can lead to this failing of the hormones again. These cells carry the messages about the hormones. Messages don't get through; hormones don't get through, at least not in the right amounts.

Basically, the main theory that however it is done, the hormones get all messed up which lead to a woman suffering a whole host of problems which make up the symptoms of post tubal ligation syndrome (check other articles about the list). This is why many women upon complaining to their doctor of their new symptoms end up on birth control pills. It's either that or a hysterectomy in most cases which leads to its own list of problems.

But if you really want to do away with ptls, your best chance of recovery lies in having a tubal reversal. Dr. Berger of the Chapel Hill Tubal Reversal Center began collecting statistics (only tubal doctor I know of who does this) when he realized how many women were coming to him for tubal reversals in order to relieve their symptoms of ptls. He can now say he has a 90% success rate in helping women recover from post tubal ligation syndrome.

What this means is that if you do go ahead with having your tubes tied and you end up in the unlucky 37% or so that have post tubal ligation syndrome, if you choose, you do have a way out. But please check more into ptls before you go ahead with your tubal ligation first.