A Rare Case of Multiple Uterine Artery Pseudoaneurysms after Hysteroscopic Myomectomy.
2022Journal of minimally invasive gynecology
Kwon CS, Dai J, Dunn M, Balica AC
View on PubMedDepartment of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Sciences, Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick, NJ.
# A C Balica A C Balica is an obstetrician-gynecologist at Rutgers who focuses on improving how doctors diagnose and treat common reproductive health problems in women, particularly those going through menopause. Her work combines imaging technology—like ultrasound and angiography—with practical clinical care to solve real problems women face, from painful sex after menopause to difficulty getting contraception placed. She also works to ensure that women don't fall through the cracks in healthcare, pushing for better systems that remember to offer appropriate medical options to midlife and older women.
Journal of minimally invasive gynecology
Kwon CS, Dai J, Dunn M, Balica AC
View on PubMedThe journal of sexual medicine
Balica AC, Cooper AM, McKevitt MK, Schertz K, Wald-Spielman D +2 more
Plain English
Researchers used ultrasound to measure vaginal wall thickness in postmenopausal women and asked them about painful sex and other menopausal vaginal symptoms. They found no connection between how thick the vaginal walls were and whether women experienced these symptoms.
This matters because doctors were hoping ultrasound measurements could become an objective, non-invasive way to diagnose and measure vaginal atrophy—a common problem after menopause—but this study shows that thickness measurements alone don't predict which women actually have symptoms.
Journal of medical case reports
Chandra AA, Grieff AN, Balica AC, Beckerman WE
Plain English
A woman needed surgery to remove a large benign tumor (fibroid) from her uterus, but surgeons discovered her blood vessels were tangled in an unusual way that made the operation dangerous and almost impossible to complete. Using a new imaging technique called transradial angiography—where doctors thread a camera through an artery in the wrist to see blood vessels in real time during surgery—the surgical team was able to map out exactly where the blood vessels were and safely remove the fibroid without complications.
This case shows that using live imaging during surgery can help doctors handle unexpected and complicated anatomy, and that using the wrist artery approach (instead of the traditional groin approach) offers advantages for both patient safety and comfort.
Journal of minimally invasive gynecology
Green AN, Goldberg L, Balica AC
View on PubMedAmerican journal of obstetrics and gynecology
Horne JA, Merjanian LL, Balica AC
View on PubMedJournal of minimally invasive gynecology
Suh CH, Lee YH, Balica AC
View on PubMedJournal of clinical ultrasound : JCU
Balica AC, Kim CS, Egan S, Ayers CA, Bachmann GA
Plain English
Researchers used ultrasound to help insert intrauterine devices (IUDs—a form of birth control) in 67 women who had complications like fibroids, unusual uterine shape, or previous IUD rejection, and successfully placed the device in 84 of them. The ultrasound guidance worked when doctors could see exactly where to place the IUD, but failed in cases where patients were in too much pain, had a blocked cervix, or couldn't have an old device removed first. This approach could help women who can't get standard IUD insertions due to physical problems or sensitivity to exams.
Women's midlife health
Kim CS, Tikhonov D, Merjanian L, Balica AC
Plain English
Researchers created a step-by-step system that helps doctors prescribe the right birth control for women of any age, including women in their 40s and 50s. Doctors often forget that older women still need contraception even as their fertility naturally declines, so this pathway ensures midlife women get proper counseling and the most suitable options for them. By training entire office teams—from schedulers to nurses to doctors—to follow this system, healthcare practices can make sure every woman, regardless of age, gets appropriate birth control recommendations based on medical evidence.
Journal of minimally invasive gynecology
Balica AC, Bachmann G, Esguerra C, Scaramella N
View on PubMedJournal of minimally invasive gynecology
Balica AC, Nassiri N, Horne J, Egan S, Wang XK
View on PubMedPublication data sourced from PubMed . Plain-English summaries generated by AI. Not medical advice.