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Transcervical Balloon Tuboplasty (and Which End Is Distal?)-Reply FREE

Norbert Gleicher, MD; Edmond Confino, MD; Ilan Tur-Kaspa, MD; Alan DeCherney, MD; Randle Corfman, MD; Carolyn Coulam, MD; Earle Robinson, MD; Gilbert Haas, MD; Eugene Katz, MD; Michael Vermesh, MD
JAMA. 1991;265(7):869-869. doi:10.1001/jama.1991.03460070050036
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In Reply.—  We appreciate Dr Hall's interest in our article, though we have to disagree with some of his comments. He suggests that tubal catheterization procedures by means of only a guide wire or wire and a catheter other than a balloon may be "simpler and safer" than the technique reported by us. Moreover, he claims that those alternative procedures are presently utilized by hundreds of physicians. We hope that he is incorrect, at least in the second of his suggestions.It would be very disturbing to us if various tubal catheterization procedures had in fact entered routine clinical use by hundreds of physicians without proper prospective evaluation and proper approval of utilized equipment by the Food and Drug Administration. Our concern in this matter was exactly the reason that our study was designed as a prospective, multicenter trial. We are at present aware of only one other group that

REFERENCES

Thurmond A, Novy A, Uchida B, Rosch J.  Fallopian tube obstruction: selective salpingography and recanalization . Radiology. 1987;;163:511-514.

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Country-Specific Mortality and Growth Failure in Infancy and Yound Children and Association With Material Stature

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Thurmond A, Novy A, Uchida B, Rosch J.  Fallopian tube obstruction: selective salpingography and recanalization . Radiology. 1987;;163:511-514.
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