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Fibroid Surgery Checklist: What Your Surgeon Won’t Tell You

May 8, 2026

Surgery is on the table. The appointment is in three weeks. You’ve nodded along through the consultation but you’re walking out with more questions than answers — and you suspect there are things you don’t even know to ask.

Fibroid surgery like myomectomy can be fraught with challenges - black woman in striped shirt with head in hands looking overwhelmed

That suspicion is correct. Here is the full checklist your surgeon may not volunteer — but absolutely should answer if you ask.

Watch First: Which Myomectomy Is RIGHT for You? — A GP’s Honest Breakdown

Before You Sign Anything — Know Your Surgical Options

There is no single “fibroid surgery.” There are several different procedures, each suited to different fibroid types, sizes, locations, and your reproductive plans.

1. Myomectomy

Myomectomy removes fibroids while preserving the uterus — preferred for women who want to retain fertility. There are three approaches:

  • Hysteroscopic myomectomy — for fibroids inside the uterine cavity (submucosal); done through the vagina, no abdominal cuts
  • Laparoscopic (keyhole) myomectomy — for fibroids on the outer wall (subserosal) or in the wall (intramural); small abdominal incisions
  • Open (abdominal) myomectomy — for very large fibroids, multiple fibroids, or specific locations; larger incision but allows the surgeon best access

2. Hysterectomy

Removal of the uterus. Definitive — fibroids cannot return. Several approaches exist (vaginal, laparoscopic, open). This ends fertility, so it is a major decision that should never be presented as the only option.

3. Uterine Fibroid Embolization (UFE)

A non-surgical procedure performed by an interventional radiologist. Tiny particles are injected into the arteries supplying the fibroids, cutting off blood flow. Fibroids shrink over weeks to months. Preserves the womb, shorter recovery, no general anaesthetic needed in many cases.

4. Other Options

Newer alternatives include MRI-guided focused ultrasound and radiofrequency ablation. Availability varies by NHS trust.

The Questions Your Surgeon Should Answer — But May Not Volunteer

Bring this list. Tick them off in the appointment.

1. Questions About Your Specific Case

  1. What type of fibroids do I have? Submucosal, intramural, subserosal, or pedunculated?
  2. What is the exact size and location of each one? Ask for the imaging report
  3. How many do I have?
  4. Do their position or size affect the surgical approach?
  5. Is my uterus enlarged? By how much?

2. Questions About the Procedure

  1. Which surgical approach are you recommending and why? Is there an alternative?
  2. Have I been considered for UFE? If not — why not?
  3. What is your personal experience with this procedure? How many do you perform per year?
  4. What are the risks specific to my case? General risks are not enough — ask about yours
  5. Will my uterus be preserved fully? What scar will be left on the uterine wall?

3. Questions About Recovery and Future Planning

  1. What is the recovery time — realistic, not best case?
  2. When can I return to work, exercise, sex?
  3. If I want to get pregnant, how long must I wait? (Usually 6–12 months after a myomectomy)
  4. Will I need a Caesarean if I get pregnant after this? (Often yes — confirm)
  5. What is my risk of fibroid recurrence?
  6. What are my options if fibroids recur in 5–10 years?

Why Fibroids Grow Back After Surgery – And What to Do About It

What Your Surgeon Probably Won’t Mention — But You Need to Know

This is the section that earns this post its title.

1. Recurrence Rates Are Higher Than You’re Told

After myomectomy, the risk of fibroid recurrence is approximately 15% at 5 years and up to 30% at 10 years. Surgeons sometimes downplay this. Knowing it should not put you off — it should help you make a fully informed decision and plan accordingly.

2. UFE Is Often Underoffered to Women Who Want Future Pregnancies

There has historically been reluctance to offer UFE to women planning pregnancy because of older concerns about fertility and pregnancy outcomes. Newer evidence shows pregnancy is possible after UFE — though myomectomy remains the preferred fertility-preserving option in many cases. You are entitled to a full discussion comparing both.

3. Blood Loss Risk Should Be Discussed Specifically

Fibroid surgery — particularly for large or multiple fibroids — can involve significant blood loss. Ask:

  • What is the typical blood loss for my procedure?
  • Will I need iron tablets or an infusion before surgery?
  • Will I be cross-matched for blood transfusion?
  • What is my risk of needing a transfusion?

4. The “Conversion to Hysterectomy” Conversation

In rare cases, a planned myomectomy may need to be converted to a hysterectomy during surgery — for example, if there is uncontrolled bleeding. Ask exactly what circumstances would lead to that decision being made on the table — and what your wishes are. This must be agreed in writing before surgery.

5. Recovery Is Often Longer Than Quoted

Standard quoted recovery times often reflect physical wound healing — not full return to function. Realistic recovery*:

ProcedureHospital StayReturn to Light ActivityFull Recovery
Hysteroscopic myomectomyDay case1–2 days1–2 weeks
Laparoscopic myomectomy1–2 nights2 weeks4–6 weeks
Open myomectomy2–3 nights4 weeks6–12 weeks
Hysterectomy (laparoscopic)1–2 nights4 weeks6–8 weeks
Hysterectomy (open)3–5 nights6 weeks8–12 weeks
Uterine fibroid embolizationOvernight1 week2–4 weeks
*Disclaimer – Recovery times are meant as rough guides and not specific to individuals. Speak to your doctor for times directly related to your circumstances.

6. Hormonal Pre-Treatment Options

For larger fibroids, your surgeon may use medications like GnRH analogues to shrink fibroids before surgery — improving outcomes and reducing blood loss. Ask if this is appropriate for your case. It is not always offered routinely but can make a meaningful difference.

Red Flags — When to Seek Help

SituationAction
Heavy bleeding causing anaemia, fatigue, or breathlessness pre-surgerySee GP within 1 week — pre-operative iron treatment
Severe pelvic pain not relieved by usual painkillersA&E or See GP within 1 week — consider possible fibroid degeneration
Sudden severe abdominal pain + feverA&E today — possible torsion or infection
Post-surgery: heavy bleeding, fever, severe painContact surgical team or A&E today
Post-surgery: leg swelling, calf pain, breathlessnessA&E today — possible DVT/PE
Post-surgery: foul-smelling discharge or wound issuesContact GP/surgical team within 24 hours
Considering surgery but want a second opinionYou are entitled to one on the NHS — ask your GP
*Disclaimer – Actions are meant as rough guides and not specific individual medical advice/recommendations. See your doctor as soon as possible or in a timely fashion if you have concerns or severe symptoms.

NHS: Fibroids — Treatment Options Including Surgery

Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists: Uterine Fibroids — Patient Information

American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists: Uterine Fibroids FAQ

The Bottom Line

Fibroid surgery is a major decision — and major decisions deserve major preparation.

The questions on this list are not aggressive, awkward, or out of place. They are exactly what your surgeon expects from a well-informed patient — and you should walk into your appointment with this checklist in your hand.

Any surgeon who is uncomfortable answering these questions is one you may want a second opinion on. You are the expert on your body. Surgery should always feel like a partnership.

If you’ve had fibroid surgery — what do you wish you’d asked before? The next woman in line is reading. Help her be ready. → Join the free AskAwayHealth community

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Review Date

This post will be medically reviewed by April 2028

About the Author

Dr Sylvia Kama-Kieghe (FRCGP, FRSM, FRSPH) is a UK-based NHS General Practitioner with over 15 years’ experience in family medicine and women’s health. She is the founder of AskAwayHealth and works clinically in primary care, urgent care and digital health.

She is a honorary lecturer at the University of Sheffield Medical School, and involved in teaching and supervising trainee doctors. Her clinical practice includes a strong focus on menopause, menstrual and fibroid-related problems, vulval and vaginal health, and preventive care for women across the life course.

Dr Sylvia is an RCGP (Royal College of General Practitioners) 2026 Digital Champion Award finalist and has been shortlisted multiple times for the CAHN Black Healthcare Awards for her work in reducing health inequalities. She also collaborates with the Patient Information Forum (PIF) on projects tackling online health misinformation and improving the quality of patient information.

Through the AskAwayHealth YouTube channel and website, Dr Sylvia aims to provide clear, calm and clinically sound explanations that help women understand their symptoms, know which red flags to look for, and feel more confident when speaking to their own doctors.

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