Robot-Assisted Surgery Gives New Hope to Woman Born Without Vagina
Robot Surgery Helps Woman Born Without Vagina

In an extraordinary testament to medical excellence, doctors have successfully performed a robot-assisted surgery on a 21-year-old specially abled patient suffering from vaginal agenesis, a rare birth condition where a girl is born without a normal opening for menstrual flow or vaginal passage. Approximately 7% of adolescent girls have reproductive tract anomalies, which are usually identified at puberty.

Complex Surgery Performed with Precision

The complex surgery was performed by Dr Aruna Kalra, Senior Consultant - Obstetrics & Gynecology, and the patient was discharged within three days in a stable condition. The patient had been suffering from excruciating abdominal and pelvic pain for the past two years, and her condition intensified with each cycle due to accumulated menstrual blood. She had visited multiple hospitals in her hometown, where doctors mostly recommended hysterectomy (removal of uterus), which would have permanently ended her chances of conceiving in the future.

Losing all hope, the patient and her family took one last chance. Initial tests confirmed that she had been suffering from vaginal agenesis, which occurs in approximately 1 in 5,000-7,000 girls. In this patient, the condition coexisted with her limb deformity by coincidence, not due to a shared cause.

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Critical Timely Intervention

Sharing the details of the case, Dr Kalra said, 'When we performed the MRI of the pelvis, it confirmed that blood was accumulating in the uterus with no natural outlet. This was a highly complex reconstructive surgery where timely intervention was critical. Delayed treatment could have resulted in severe chronic pelvic pain, repeated infections, endometriosis due to backward menstrual flow, and even damage to uterine and ovarian structures, ultimately compromising her fertility. Our goal was to preserve her uterus and reproductive health, and robotic-assisted minimally invasive surgery gave us that precision, along with reduced bleeding, minimized infection risk, and accelerated recovery, making this life-changing outcome possible.'

Positive Outcome and Future Prospects

The patient recovered remarkably well. She was comfortable, mobile, and stable at discharge. With proper follow-up, she is expected to have normal menstrual flow, significantly reduced pain, and preserved fertility with the possibility of natural conception. This successful outcome highlights the importance of timely intervention and advanced robotic-assisted techniques in safeguarding reproductive health and improving quality of life.

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