Tubal Reversal Is The Best Option!
December 12th, 2007Tubal ligation was intended to be permanent. Circumstances can change and women with tied tubes may want more children. When this happens, they often are told that treatment by in vitro fertilization (IVF) is their only option. In reality, tubal reversal is the best choice.
Comparing Tubal Reversal and IVF
Once the fallopian tubes are repaired by tubal reversal surgery, there is a chance every month for pregnancy to occur naturally. This is why tubal reversal is more successful than IVF.
IVF requires a woman to have weeks of hormone injections to produce many eggs each time pregnancy is attempted. The pregnancy rate with IVF is approximately 25% per treatment cycle. Most women require multiple IVF treatments to become pregnant. At a cost of $12,000 per cycle, this treatment becomes expensive very quickly!
The overall pregnancy rate among Dr. Berger’s tubal reversal patients is 70%, and the cost of a tubal reversal procedure is less than half that of a single IVF treatment cycle. This graph shows that pregnancy rates are higher after tubal reversal performed by Dr. Berger than after IVF. This is true regardless of a woman’s age.
Pregnancy Rates by Age After Tubal Reversal vs IVF
Tubal Reversal
IVF

Conclusion About Tubal Reversal vs IVF
Tubal reversal has a higher pregnancy rate then in vitro fertilization and is much less expensive when performed at Chapel Hill Tubal Reversal Center.
Are There Hidden Costs of Tubal Reversal?
The discounted fee when paying in full at the time you schedule tubal reversal at Chapel Hill Tubal Reversal Center is $5900. This is an all-inclusive fee. There are no hidden charges! The fee covers the following:
Preoperative record review and consultation
Dr. Berger’s surgical fee
Anesthesiologist’s and nurse anesthetist’s fees
Surgical supplies
Operating facility fees
Postoperative pain medication and antibiotics
Follow-up care
What To Expect at Chapel Hill Tubal Reversal Center
Most of our patients come to Chapel Hill from other states and from other countries. To minimize the time you spend here, your preoperative consultation will be scheduled for the day preceding your tubal reversal. On the day of your reversal procedure, you will spend the morning at Chapel Hill Tubal Reversal Center and the rest of the day at your hotel room at the Sheraton-Chapel Hill. The following morning, one of our nurses will visit you at your hotel for a postoperative check prior to your returning home. You will be here for two nights, on the day prior to surgery for your preoperative consultation and on the day of your tubal reversal procedure.
I Will Be Happy To Assist You
If you would like additional information or would like to schedule your tubal reversal procedure, please feel free to contact me. You can reach me from 8 am to 8 pm Eastern Time at (919) 656-8204 or by e-mail at JuliaS@tubal-reversal.net. I will be glad to answer any questions you might have!
Submitted by Julia Smith, RN
Nurse Administrator

The Tubal Reversal Message Board is a place for women to get support, information, and share opinions with other women and our staff about tubal reversal surgery. New members agree to adhere to certain
Informed consent means that a person has access to and understands all relevant information about a medical or surgical treatment necessary to make an informed decision about it. In the case of tubal ligation reversal, informed consent means that a person understands how it the surgery is performed, the alternative treatment of in vitro fertilization, and the potential benefits, risks, and likelihood of success from these treatments.
The
Salpingostomy involves creating an opening in the end of the fallopian tube with a microsurgical needle electrode. The opening is enlarged and gently folded back so that the internal lining extends over the opened end of the tube. The internal lining is covered with cilia, the hairline projections that beat in coordinated waves. They help capture an egg as it is released from the ovary just as the fimbrial end of the tube does normally. Sutures are placed around the end of the tube that has been folded back. The sutures are hidden underneath the folded-back tubal end. When ampullary salpingostomy is completed, the tubal end looks similar to a normal fallopian tube, provided there is a sufficient ampullary length of tube remaining to fold back.
Tubal implantation is performed by making an incision through the uterine muscle. The incision is carried down into the uterine cavity. The tubal segment that has been separated from the uterus is opened and passed down until its proximal end is inside the uterine cavity. Before implanting the tube in the uterus, a suture is placed through the open end that goes inside the uterus. This suture is used to anchor the fallopian tube within the uterine cavity.
When the tube has been anchored inside the uterine cavity, sutures are placed in the uterine muscle around the implanted tube. Care must be taken to close the uterine incision sufficiently to allow healing, but not so tightly that it compresses or constricts the implanted tube. Tubal implantation is a more difficult operation to perform than tubal anastomosis. Tubal implantation accounts for 1% of tubal reversal procedures at
After opening the blocked ends of the two tubal segments, I pass a flexible stent or thread through the tubal lumen or opening of the two segments until it reaches the uterine cavity. This ensures that the fallopian tube is open from the uterine cavity to its fimbrial end and that the tubal segments align properly. A suture placed in the connective tissue, just beneath the fallopian tube segments, draws the tubal segments together.
The muscular and outer layers of the tubal segments are connected with microsurgical sutures. Care is taken to avoid suturing the inner layer of the fallopian tube. Suture material is a foreign body. Stitches placed in the inner tubal lining can cause scarring inside the tubal lumen. When the two tubal segments are joined together, the stent is withdrawn from the fimbrial end of the tube.



