Dedicated to women's health and well-being

Video

Sponsored By

VIDEO: Dr. LeBlang - Five Fibroids, Why Is This Woman A Bad Candidate For MR Guided Focused Ultrasound?

May 20, 2009 - 2:14pm 321 reads 0 comments

Dr. LeBlang explains why a woman with five or more fibroids is a bad candidate for the Magnetic Resonance (MR) guided Focused Ultrasound procedure.

Dr. LeBlang:
Some patients that have more than five fibroids are not great candidates for this procedure, and that’s pretty much because of the technology limitations right now. Right now, the FDA has said that we can keep a patient on the table for up to three to four hours during this procedure.

If we have more than five fibroids, then we have to localize each fibroid and then treat it and that can be very time consuming. So right now, to effectively treat a patient in one sitting, they pretty much have to have under five fibroids.

About Dr. LeBlang, M.D.:
Dr. Suzanne LeBlang, M.D., specializes in MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) applications. She is an American trained and Board Certified radiologist with an added certification in neuroradiology. Dr. LeBlang performed the first FDA-approved MRgFUS (Magnetic Resonance guided Focused Ultrasound) case in the U.S., the only non-invasive procedure for the treatment of uterine fibroids, and has, as a single operator, done the most procedures in the country to date. She has extensive experience in treating fibroids including working with very complex fibroid cases.

Visit Dr. LeBlang at My Uterine Fibroids:
http://www.myuterinefibroids.com/home.php

Start Asking & Sharing

EmpowHer's Health Newsletter

The latest women's health news delivered to you each week

Featured Provider Discover more about the nation's top provider.

Essure

Essure

The Essure procedure, FDA approved since 2002, is a permanent birth control method that can be performed in the comfort of a doctor’s office in about 10 minutes without hormones, cutting, burning or t

Health News Read up-to-the-minute medical news & stories.

Heart-Pacing Devices Hold Promise for Heart Failure

THURSDAY, Oct. 1 (HealthDay News) -- New research provides more evidence that a new type of pacemaker/defibrillator technology may be a good option for patients with mild forms of heart ...
Read more