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Journal Article
Review
Gastro-intestinal surgery and fertility.
Journal of Visceral Surgery 2018 June
In France, 10 to 15% of couples in the overall population have a fertility problem. Preservation of sexual and reproductive function should be a major concern for all patients capable of procreation who undergo treatment for gastro-intestinal disease. The gastro-intestinal diseases most often responsible for fertility disorders include chronic inflammatory diseases, intestinal cancer and hereditary diseases, such as the Lynch syndrome and familial adenomatous polyposis. Obesity is responsible for a 20% loss of fertility but the effects of bariatric surgery on fertility are controversial. Nonetheless, in the light of progress in surgical techniques and better knowledge of gastro-intestinal disease the negative impact of surgery on fertility warrants attention. Effectively, fertility can be preserved after certain major gastro-intestinal operations such as cytoreductive surgery with intraperitoneal chemotherapy, total coloprotectomy with ileo-anal anastomosis and rectosigmoid resection, as long as the patient's age permits and resection of the reproductive organs is not necessary.
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