Cover Page
Image

This book is dedicated to the memory of Victor Bonney.

It is also dedicated to Jane, Vicki, Lucia, and Maggie for their support, understanding, patience and love, which they have shown us in our lives together.

Bonney’s Gynaecological Surgery

TWELFTH EDITION

Alberto (Tito) de Barros Lopes, MB ChB, FRCOG

Honorary Clinical Senior Research Fellow
University of Exeter Medical School
Retired Consultant Gynaecological Oncologist
Northern Gynaecological Oncology Centre
Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Gateshead
Royal Cornwall Hospital, Truro, UK

Nick M. Spirtos, MD, FACOG

Clinical Professor, University of Nevada Las Vegas School of Medicine
Medical Director, Women’s Cancer Center of Nevada
Las Vegas, NV, USA

Paul Hilton, MD, FRCOG

Guest Clinical Senior Lecturer, Newcastle University
Retired Consultant Gynaecologist & Urogynaecologist
Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
Newcastle upon Tyne, UK

John M. Monaghan, MB, FRCS (Ed), FRCOG

Retired Senior Lecturer in Gynaecological Oncology
University of Newcastle Upon Tyne
Retired Gynaecological Oncologist
Regional Department of Gynaecological Oncology
Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Gateshead, UK

 

Wiley Logo

Preface

“The human form is a very delicate organization. It is not a thing which should be meddled with by people who do not know it as intimately as it is possible to know it”

Sir Watson Cheyne, Scottish surgeon and bacteriologist (1852–1932)

It is now more than 100 years since Comyns Berkeley and Victor Bonney published the first edition of what became the bible of gynaecological surgery in the UK. It is also over 30 years since, in 1984, one of the current editors, John Monaghan, was asked to take on the ninth edition as a major revision; little did he realise that he would continue as an editor for another three editions. Over these 30 years much has changed, not only in gynaecology and gynaecological surgery but also in the way in which we access information both textually and visually, with the invention of the World Wide Web in 1989 and the founding of YouTube in 2005.

What makes this textbook so successful is that it continues to be published in print well into the first quarter of the 21st century? Sir Watson Cheyne’s statement reminds us that one should not undertake surgery without knowing the subject intimately, and ‘Bonney’ provides the foundation for developing the skills needed to become a competent if not a great gynaecological surgeon.

This edition continues the format introduced in the last edition, being divided into sections, the first section covering general principles and basic techniques, the second section, presented by anatomical site, covers the common procedures undertaken in day‐to‐day benign gynaecology and the remaining sections concentrate on the two surgical subspecialties of urogynaecology and gynaecological oncology. The editorial team has changed slightly from the previous edition, bringing in the internationally recognized skill of Paul Hilton to write the section on urogynaecology, which includes over 100 new drawings.

All the chapters have been updated based on new technologies and level 1 and 2 evidence. Over 160 references and articles, published since the last edition, have been added and these include 13 randomized controlled trials, 30 Cochrane reviews and over 20 specialist guidelines.

We would like to thank Wiley‐Blackwell for inviting us to produce this edition of Bonney’s Gynaecological Surgery. We also thank the production team for their assistance in the pleasant process of communicating our views of gynaecological surgery. Our special thanks go to Chris Kevern who produced the cover photograph for this edition.

Finally, we each thank the others in our editorial team for their skill, companionship and friendship which has not been impaired by production of this latest edition of ‘Bonney’.

The Editors
November 2017

PART 1
General