How To Prepare
Tell your doctor if you:
- Are or might be pregnant.
- Are
taking any medicines.
- Are allergic to any
medicines.
- Have had bleeding problems or take blood-thinners, such
as aspirin or warfarin (Coumadin).
- Have been treated for a vaginal,
cervical, or pelvic infection in the past 6 weeks.
- Have any heart
or lung problems.
It is best to have a hysteroscopy done when you are not having your
menstrual period. If there is a chance that you could become pregnant, the
hysteroscopy should be done before you are ovulating so your doctor is sure you
are not pregnant.
Do not douche, use tampons, or use vaginal medicines for 24 hours
before the hysteroscopy.
You may be given a medicine (sedative) to
relax you for the test, or
general, regional, or local anesthesia can be used.
Your doctor will discuss this with you. If you are going to have
general anesthesia, you will not be able to eat or
drink for 8 hours before the test.
Arrange to have someone drive you home the day of the test in case
you are given a sedative.
You will be asked to sign a consent form before the test. Talk to
your doctor about any concerns you have regarding the need for the test, its
risks, how it will be done, or what the results will mean. To help you
understand the importance of this test, fill out the
medical test
information form
(What is a PDF document?).
The hospital or surgery center may send you instructions on how to
get ready for your surgery, or a nurse may call you with instructions before
your surgery.