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Women's health

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I almost cancelled my Hysteroscopy due to Mumsnet.

87 replies

RedCheese · 20/08/2021 23:48

Last week I was booked in at the hospital to have a Hysteroscopy and I was nervous. Like most, my first reaction was to search Mumsnet for other people’s experiences of this procedure. What I found was many threads and posts saying how horrific it was. Words like a barbaric, agonising, and trauma inducing were shared, with many stating they wouldn’t do it without general anaesthetic. My nerves had now turned to terror. I phoned my best friend for reassurance, only to learn that she herself was booked in next week to have a regular smear test under sedation, due to suffering from anxiety and getting all tensed up. With the knowledge that I was having a Hysteroscopy with only a painkiller an hour before the procedure, I was seriously thinking what the Hell I was signed up for? By now I wanted to cancel my Hysteroscopy. How bad would it be to cancel... surely my gynaecology issues weren’t that serious? I phoned my 84 year old, severely religious friend and shared my fears. After listening to my worries, she asked the following question. If two women have penetrative sex with the same man, would they have exactly the same experience? After I got over my absolute shock that she used the words “penetrative Sex” in a conversation, I answered that no, of course not. One woman could be relaxed/experienced, there's different positions… there are too many entities to compare. Exactly she said, so why do you think other people's experiences of this procedure relates to you? Everybody is different and everyone’s southern region is drastically different to the next? She then went on to say that the worst reviews and forum posts are people who are upset and angry… happy people don’t always bother writing posts.

She was 100% right. I calmed myself and tried to bring logic to a situation where I’d shown none. In the past, I’ve had major surgery which took 8 months recovery time 5 times over, I’ve had 7 rounds of fertility without even blinking, as well as a c-section and this is what I panicked over. I phoned the hospital and asked to be the first in the queue that day to stop myself worrying while waiting to be seen. I decided I was going to ask the gynaecologist the following questions; can you use the smallest speculum as I’ve experienced pain when a big speculum was used. He said he wouldn’t use any speculum if that made me feel better. I asked how often he did this procedure – 5 days a week, I asked if he’d use water or air (water is better) – he said water. I asked, what if he found adhesions - he would bring me back for a spinal (I can’t have GA) and finally I asked if he needed to remove a polyp or when he did a biopsy, would it hurt – he said he’d stop if anything was getting painful and that I was in full control.

5 minutes later I was in theatre trying to relax “down there”. I was waiting for the tugging to start as fertility doctors have struggled to get a catheter in during IVF, one struggled for over an hour. The doctor stepped in front and I felt the first whoosh of water going in which was cold and strangely refreshing. As I looked to the screen waiting for the doctor to insert something, he said, there’s your womb on the screen. WHAT? I didn’t know he’d started. Where was this guy during my IVF struggles. I swear he must have had a GPS system down there as he arrived immediately at the destination and then spent the next 10 minutes looking around (no polyps thank God). Last few minutes, when he was moving to the furthest parts and taking a biopsy, it felt like a sudden period pain but not anything severe. I held my hands on my stomach and it was over in less than a minute. It was a walk in the park compared to a spinal.

When I read some of the posts relating to Hysteroscopy on Mumsnet, some offered little explanation as to the why it was difficult. Was it the speculum that hurt, the method used by the doctor or personal medical issues? I didn’t have any polyps removed so I have no experience of that but what I did have was a Hysteroscopy with a biopsy without ever having a vaginal birth which some have warned against. I should imagine that someone who has had a vaginal birth would have walked my experience of a Hysteroscopy, after all, they’ve already performed the hardest (and most amazing) procedure in the world already.

My reason for posting this is because not everyone is going to have an 84 year old friend to shock some sense into them. Female health is vitally important and I hope that no one will be reduced to my level of stupidity of almost cancelling a medical procedure because they scare themselves online. If you are going for a Hysteroscopy, ask the questions, request to be the first on the list and (the hardest part) try and relax.

Best wishes to anyone that’s booked in for this procedure, now or in the future.

OP posts:
NewYearNewTwatName · 22/08/2021 00:41

Well for a minute there I thought I was reading one of those crappy made up moral stories that do the rounds on Facebook. Especially the talking to old wise person. The penetrative sex question was just weird. Confused

BloomingTrees · 22/08/2021 13:52

I'm also wondering if this was written by a man. Something slightly odd about it.

7 rounds of fertility without blinking, yet you once had a dr spend an hour trying to put a catheter in ?

Ninkanink · 22/08/2021 15:11

No woman would ever say, so, you’re worried about this incredibly invasive procedure which many women find excruciatingly painful, are you? Well, let’s make it all better by talking about penis in vagina!

cherrytree63 · 22/08/2021 15:34

So glad you had a good experience.
I posted on another thread recently, mine is one of the horror stories.
I've had 2 big babies.
I've had a Mirena inserted with no pain relief and minimal discomfort, then went for a 12 hour shift on the labour centre.
Had a surgical menopause and got vaginal atrophy and bladder prolapse.
I cannot have penetrative sex.
The vagifem applicators, about the width of a pencil hurt me.
Despite explaining all this to the male consultant I was told I could not have a local anaesthetic.
My biopsy was unsuccessful.
Booked to come back and have a biopsy with a local.
It was in the same room, same equipment. Maybe Mondays are different to Wednesdays for locals.
Thinking I was getting a pipelle biopsy, and I was going to be fine this time, I found it very surprising and bloody painful to have that water squirted into me. Not refreshing in the slightest. Too unbearable to continue.
A procedure not explained to me and not consented to.
I bled for 4 days afterwards.
Booked for GA now.
If a woman says she's got problems and asks for pain relief, should she really just be stoic and tolerate that?

unsure111 · 22/08/2021 15:35

@Luckingfovely

Do you want a round of applause? Great that it went well for you, I'm sure we're all really happy for you, but do you realise how patronising you sound?

You've obviously got as far as understanding that all women are different physically, but completely missed the point that what was easy for you might not be for anyone else, and I speak with a little experience.

I would like to believe that you were sharing this honestly and meant to help... but for many others out there who have had very different experiences, it feels very tone deaf.

But then she could argue "what was hard for you was easy for me". She was giving her experience to help ease the mind of someone researching this procedure. Everyone has different experiences. Should we only post about the terrible experiences of everything and anyone who had a positive experience has to be quiet and not share theirs, just because you don't want to hear it?
Airpit · 22/08/2021 17:51

@unsure111 erm yes actually. If you are going to post advice on actual health procedures then anecdotal "I'm alright jack" stories are not on.

I'll put it this way, do I want to hear about all the rugby tackles which are successful and nothing goes wrong? If I'm having a pint down the pub, Maybe. When I am considering my personal safety in the sport then no. I want to know what's the actual use case I'm dealing with. What are the risks and what do I need to do to minimise them. That everything went well for Jane Noname in her last match is immaterial to me.

Milenpoe · 24/08/2021 09:32

Delighted for you OP.

Women should still have a choice whether they have anaesthetic or not regardless of how completely fine your experience was.

I used to be fine with any old procedure. Then a GP fucked up a routine coil insertion 12 years ago and instead of doing what she should have done, she rammed it through the wall of my uterus so I ended up needing X-rays, an MRI and then surgery under GA to removed the damn thing.

Also had a very traumatic abortion and miscarriage but had three problem free births. I am now a nervous wreck when it comes to vaginal procedures.

So no, I am not sorry that I am so fucking anxious about having my insides poked around now that I can't bear the thought of it without anaesthetic and no woman should just have to 'relax' and embrace the whole idea.

MaMelon · 24/08/2021 11:18

Well bully for you OP - delighted that you found the whole procedure a breeze. I found giving birth a doddle - that does not mean it's the same for other women.

I'm having one next week under GA. I saw a lovely Consultant who saw how upset I was at the thought of having one and offered me the full range of choices - awake/no anaesthetic, awake/spinal, awake/sedation, GA.

AND THAT IS HOW IT FUCKING SHOULD BE.

DupontsLark · 24/08/2021 11:49

The language is odd

I phoned my 84 year old, severely religious friend and shared my fears

What does 'severely religious' mean?

Everybody is different and everyone’s southern region is drastically different to the next?

If your friend could say penetrative sex why did she use such coy language for vagina and reproductive organs?

5 minutes later I was in theatre trying to relax “down there”

Hmm

Female health is vitally important

Who knew?

MaMelon · 24/08/2021 12:21

I agree - the language and terminology is all off here. Something doesn’t ring true.

AlbertBridge · 13/09/2021 10:36

I've just had a hysteroscopy this morning, about an hour ago.

I'd read the threads on here and was CRAPPING MYSELF but I can honestly say my experience was painless. I didn't have any anaesthetic at all, but I did have a Solpadeine Plus (the codeine one) 2 hours before. I couldn't feel anything, even when they did a biopsy.

I'm not writing this to brag, just to reassure people that it isn't a guaranteed nightmare. It was an all-female team and they said it varies - some women can't get through the procedure, others are fine.

I've had other camera procedures - down the nose, the thrust, and up the arse, and this one was by far the easiest.

I do think women should have the option for anaesthesia if they want it, of course. My consultant said I could rebook for a GA if I wanted, but I just thought I'd get it over with.

So yes. That was my experience.

AlbertBridge · 13/09/2021 10:59

*throat! Not thrust. Although they did thrust it down my throat.

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