Oklahoma Fibroids in Oklahoma City: Gynecologic Surgery for Fibroid Removal

Oklahoma Fibroids is a gynecologic surgery practice in Oklahoma City specializing in the diagnosis and surgical treatment of uterine fibroids, with a focus on minimally invasive techniques and outpatient procedures. It occupies a distinct position in the local surgeon landscape as one of few practices in the metro area that limits its scope almost entirely to fibroid-related surgery, avoiding the broader obstetric or general gynecologic load that most OB-GYN surgical groups carry.

What Oklahoma Fibroids actually is

The practice operates as a specialty surgical group focused on fibroids, the noncancerous growths that develop in or on the uterus and affect roughly one in four women of reproductive age. Rather than serving as a general gynecology office handling annual exams, contraception, and pregnancy care, Oklahoma Fibroids exists to diagnose fibroid conditions and perform surgery when conservative management fails. The surgeon leading the practice has trained in hysteroscopic techniques and uterine-sparing procedures, which means the focus is on removing fibroids while preserving the uterus itself, a distinction that matters significantly to women who wish to maintain fertility or avoid the physiologic effects of hysterectomy.

Services and surgical options

Oklahoma Fibroids offers three main surgical pathways, priced differently based on complexity and imaging requirements:

Hysteroscopic fibroid resection (TCRM), the least invasive approach, ranges from $8,000 to $12,000 depending on the number and size of fibroids treated. This procedure is performed through the cervix using a camera and instruments, requires no incisions, and results in same-day discharge in most cases.

Myomectomy (open or laparoscopic surgical fibroid removal) with preservation of the uterus runs $15,000 to $22,000. Laparoscopic myomectomy, which uses small incisions and a camera, typically costs on the lower end and allows return to normal activity within two to three weeks. Open myomectomy, required for larger or deeper fibroids, costs more and involves a longer recovery. Confirm current pricing with the office, as surgical fees adjust with changes to facility and anesthesia costs.

Uterine artery embolization (UAE), a minimally invasive interventional radiology procedure, is not performed in-office but is discussed and arranged in partnership with local interventional radiologists at Integris Health and OU Health. This option ranges from $10,000 to $18,000 and may be suitable for women who wish to avoid open surgery but prefer a radiologic approach to hysteroscopic resection.

All procedures include preoperative imaging (typically MRI) and a consultation to review anatomy and recovery expectations. Insurance coverage is verified in advance for each patient.

How Oklahoma Fibroids compares to other Oklahoma City surgeons

Oklahoma City has two dominant OB-GYN surgical groups: the Integris Women's Health Surgical Center, which offers gynecologic surgery including myomectomy alongside high-volume obstetric and reconstructive procedures, and OU Health Gynecologic Surgery, which similarly integrates fibroid removal into a broad surgical portfolio. Both are well-staffed and credentialed but schedule fibroid patients within a mixed caseload, meaning lead times for elective fibroid surgery often extend six to twelve weeks.

Oklahoma Fibroids operates a dedicated schedule for fibroid cases, typically accommodating patients within three to four weeks of consultation. This efficiency comes at no additional cost to the patient but reflects the practice's structural focus. For women with symptomatic fibroids who have exhausted medical management (typically GnRH agonists or progestin IUDs), the shorter wait is material. For those exploring uterine-sparing options or specifically interested in hysteroscopic techniques, the practice's narrow specialization also means the surgeon has higher case volume in that specific area than a generalist.

For patients without strong preference among surgical modalities, or for those with complex reproductive history requiring simultaneous procedures, Integris or OU Health may be preferable, as they offer broader surgical depth in related areas.

Who Oklahoma Fibroids suits and does not suit

Oklahoma Fibroids suits women aged 30 to 50 with symptomatic fibroids (heavy menstrual bleeding, pelvic pressure, dysmenorrhea) who desire uterine preservation and wish to avoid extended wait times. It is also appropriate for women seeking a second opinion on fibroid management or those who have had unsatisfactory results from prior conservative treatment.

The practice does not serve pregnant patients, does not perform obstetric care, and typically does not manage fibroids in women actively seeking immediate conception, as certain surgical approaches require a brief healing period before attempting pregnancy.

The first visit

An initial consultation involves a focused history of menstrual symptoms, review of any prior imaging, and a vaginal ultrasound to assess fibroid location, size, and number. The surgeon then reviews which surgical option best matches the patient's anatomy and goals. Most consultations conclude with a preoperative plan and a date offered within the scheduling window. No same-day biopsy or diagnostic procedure is performed at the first visit; imaging and blood work occur afterward if surgery is chosen.

Hours, parking, and location logistics

The practice operates Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., with surgical procedures scheduled typically on Tuesday and Thursday mornings. Parking is available in the medical office building lot off NW 63rd Street (verification recommended, as new construction in that area may affect access). Procedures require no overnight stay; patients are discharged to home with a responsible adult within two to four hours of completion.

Oklahoma Fibroids fills a specific need in the Oklahoma City surgical market: women with fibroids who have decided to pursue surgery benefit from a surgeon whose practice is large enough to support that volume efficiently, yet small enough that the caseload remains focused and wait times remain short.