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The Acessa procedure is recommended for pre-menopausal women (typically younger than 55 years old)1 who are tired of living with fibroids' ongoing pain and discomfort and are looking for a minimally invasive option that allows them to keep their uterus and return to daily life quickly after the procedure.
You are prepped and brought into the operating room for anesthesia.
Your Physician makes three small incisions-one in your belly button - one below your bikini line - and inserts a tiny camera and ultrasound into each incision.
Your Physician precisely located each fibroid with the Acessa ultrasound probe and guidance mapping, allowing a full view of your uterus.
Next, your Physician deploys the tip of the Acessa handpiece into the fibroid while preserving healthy uterine tissue.
The Physician deploys controlled heat through the Acessa handpiece to destroy the fibroid tissue. The Physician repeats this process until every targeted fibroid is fully treated. Once the procedure is complete, your Physician stitches the small incisions on the skin.
You will wake up in the recovery room. Most patients get cleared to go home within two hours. Women typically feel ready to return to work and daily activities after 4-5 days. In terms of when you will see symptom relief – this is a hot topic. It depends on how big the fibroid is and what symptoms you're experiencing.
The Acessa procedure is recommended for pre-menopausal women (typically younger than 55 years old)1 who are tired of living with the ongoing pain and discomfort of fibroids and are looking for a minimally invasive option that allows them to keep their uterus and return to daily life quickly after the procedure.
Size and location of fibroids are important factors in what procedure is right for you. That's why physicians do an MRI or ultrasound prior to determining if you are a candidate for the procedure.
The Acessa procedure has been studied on fibroids up to 7CM .The procedure can be used to treat most types of symptomatic fibroids, including subserosal, intramural, transmural, and certain submucosal.
Vs. Hysterectomy – The Acessa procedure allows you to keep your uterus and has a quicker recovery time than a hysterectomy. However, hysterectomy is a definitive treatment, so there is no chance fibroid symptoms will return after recovery.
Vs. Myomectomy – Myomectomy cuts fibroids and surgically removes fibroid tissues from the uterus. The Acessa procedure, by comparison, does not require cutting or suturing within the uterus.2 Myomectomy may be considered a minimally invasive surgery because incisions into the abdomen can be small. The Acessa procedure may be a less invasive option because there are zero incisions on the uterine surface (serosa) that require suturing and only 3 small incisions on the skin (myomectomy typically requires 4 to 6 incisions in the skin).
Vs. UAE involves ischemic necrosis, which consists of the tissue slowly dying due to lack of blood supply and typically involves an overnight stay for pain management. The Acessa procedure uses coagulative necrosis, which destroys the fibroid cells and nerve endings with heat and reduces the fibroid volume over time. After the Acessa procedure, patients typically return home the same day. Interventional radiologists perform UAE. The Acessa procedure is performed by minimally invasive gynecologic surgeons.
There are a minimum of three incisions, one in the belly button, one above the bikini line, and one small incision that does not typically leave a scar by the bikini line.
Learn more about the Acessa procedure at https://acessaprocedure.com/
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Studies show that fibroids do not have to be completely removed to resolve symptoms.1 Treating the fibroid cells so they shrink and stop putting pressure on the uterus may help to resolve symptoms. The data in the IDE clinical study showed even a 45.1% average shrinkage in fibroid volume can result in significant improvement in heavy periods, pelvic pain, and bulk.
As a reminder, the Acessa procedure is a treatment for benign (non-cancerous) symptomatic fibroids. If patients are at risk for cancer or malignancy, the Acessa procedure is not the appropriate treatment.
To summarize, the Acessa procedure works by heating the fibroid cells from the inside out, not by removing the fibroid. Cell tissues die when they reach a certain temperature. The Acessa procedure is designed to heat the fibroid tissue to the point that the tissue dies. The dead fibroid tissue shrinks and shrivels over time. The dead fibroid tissue is not harmful. It gets absorbed by the body, just like any dead tissue cell.
Laparoscopic RFA was first performed on fibroids in 1999 by Dr. Bruce Lee.2 After many successful studies, the original Acessa system was FDA-cleared in November 2012. Since 2012, physicians have performed over 4,000 procedures to date.5 The most advanced technology, the Acessa Lap-RFA system, was FDA-cleared in 2018.
Your Physician can explain the potential complications of the Acessa procedure, as well as those of other available fibroid therapies.
Many insurance companies and Medicaid carriers cover the procedure. We suggest scheduling an appointment with a physician trained in the Acessa procedure to discuss whether the procedure is appropriate for you. If the Acessa procedure is a match for your fibroid treatment, then your Physician's office will request insurance approval in advance by submitting a pre-authorization request.