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Send us a text with a question or thought on this episode ( We cannot replay from this link)
Expert excision specialist Dr. Lora Liu reveals what patients should expect during post-surgery follow-ups, emphasizing the critical importance of receiving pathology reports. We discuss the non-negotiable documentation patients deserve after endometriosis excision surgery and how these records confirm exactly what was removed.
• Pathology reports are the most important post-surgery document and should be provided without patients having to "pull teeth" to get them
• Pathology reports definitively confirm endometriosis diagnosis and provide proof that excision (not ablation) was performed
• Operative reports are helpful but less crucial than pathology reports as they're surgeon-dictated narratives
• Every excised piece of tissue should be sent to pathology for proper documentation
• Understanding the difference between excision and ablation techniques through your surgical documentation
• Medical records belong to patients and should be readily available upon request
Do you have more questions? Keep them coming! Send them in using the link in the top of the description of this podcast episode, by emailing [email protected], or visiting the endobattery.com contact page.
Support the show
Website endobattery.com
Instagram: EndoBattery
By Alanna4.8
1212 ratings
Send us a text with a question or thought on this episode ( We cannot replay from this link)
Expert excision specialist Dr. Lora Liu reveals what patients should expect during post-surgery follow-ups, emphasizing the critical importance of receiving pathology reports. We discuss the non-negotiable documentation patients deserve after endometriosis excision surgery and how these records confirm exactly what was removed.
• Pathology reports are the most important post-surgery document and should be provided without patients having to "pull teeth" to get them
• Pathology reports definitively confirm endometriosis diagnosis and provide proof that excision (not ablation) was performed
• Operative reports are helpful but less crucial than pathology reports as they're surgeon-dictated narratives
• Every excised piece of tissue should be sent to pathology for proper documentation
• Understanding the difference between excision and ablation techniques through your surgical documentation
• Medical records belong to patients and should be readily available upon request
Do you have more questions? Keep them coming! Send them in using the link in the top of the description of this podcast episode, by emailing [email protected], or visiting the endobattery.com contact page.
Support the show
Website endobattery.com
Instagram: EndoBattery

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