PEARS (Pelvic Excision And Repair Surgery)

PEARS (Pelvic Excision And Repair Surgery) is a form of plastic reconstructive surgery of the pelvis developed by Dr. Thomas Hilgers at the Pope Paul VI Institute.78 The name reflects the procedure's dual mandate: complete excision of pelvic disease and systematic anatomic repair.

In PEARS, endometriosis is excised rather than ablated. This is not a technical preference. Ablation destroys the surface of a lesion; excision removes it entirely, including the base. Disease masked by destruction continues to progress. Disease removed is gone.2728

Excision is only half the procedure. The repair component applies a layered system of anti-adhesion measures: micro-monopolar or CO₂-laser technique, Prolene imbricating closure of the peritoneum and ovarian cortex with rough edges inverted internally, heparinized Ringer's lactate irrigation, and talc-free hydro-pack bowel isolation. The imbricating closure leaves only smooth, glistening serosa exposed to the peritoneal cavity. This matters because post-operative adhesions are a leading cause of secondary infertility after pelvic surgery.

PEARS applies across the full range of pelvic pathology: peritoneal endometriosis, ovarian endometriomas, polycystic ovaries, fibroids, fallopian tube disease, and adhesive disease.78 The goal is not symptom relief. The goal is anatomic restoration of fertility.

Sources

  1. Laparoscopic Excision vs. Ablation in Endometriosis: A Comparison of Symptom and Quality of Life Outcomes. . EndoNews
  2. Laparoscopic Excision Versus Ablation for Endometriosis. . PubMed
  3. Hilgers TW. The Medical and Surgical Practice of NaProTECHNOLOGY. Pope Paul VI Institute Press; 2004. . The Medical and Surgical Practice of NaProTECHNOLOGY

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