Having sex 500 times a day doesn’t seem to be doing the trick for Kim Kardashian.
A month after detailing her scores of daily sexpacades with husband
Kanye West, the 34-year-old reality starlet had her uterus "cleaned out"
on Sunday's episode of "Keeping Up with the Kardashians."
And doctors say the procedure — hysteroscopy with dilation and curettage — is legitimate for women having fertility problems.
"This is not like Gwyneth Paltrow steaming her vagina," says Dr. Thomas
Molinaro, a reproductive endocrinologist at Reproductive Medicine
Associates of New Jersey, referring to a spa treatment Paltrow gushed
about earlier this year. "This is a valid medical procedure that's been
around for ages."
It’s also “fairly common,” says Molinaro, who performs it 10 to 30 times a week.
Under the procedure, a doctor uses a camera to look for polyps,
fibroids and anything else in the uterus that may be affecting the
chances of getting pregnant. Suspicious growths get snipped out, and the
uterus wall gets scraped to make sure nothing is lingering.
It requires anesthesia, but the patient can go home that day and go back to work the next.
Kardashian may have had a recent miscarriage, irregular periods or a
change in bleeding, which are the main reasons doctors would perform the
curettage, says Dr. Tomer Singer, a reproductive endocrinologist and
infertility specialist at Lenox Hill Hospital.
Singer estimates that approximately 15% of patients who have recently
miscarried can expect to have something left over in their uterus, like
Kardashian did from delivery of her daughter North in 2013, as viewers
saw Sunday night.
Any growth in the uterus takes up valuable "real estate" that an embryo
can't implant on, Molinaro says. Plus, problem spots can disrupt blood
flow, making it harder to conceive.
And the risks don't stop pre-pregnancy: Leftover placenta can also increase the odds of a subsequent miscarriage, Singer says.
But now that Kardashian's had the procedure, it may not be long before North West gets a sibling.
"We see a significant improvement in pregnancy rates (post-op)," Singer says.
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