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Endometriosis

Endometriosis is a common medical condition where the tissue lining the uterus (the endometrium, from endo, "inside", and metra, "womb") is found outside of the uterus, typically affecting other organs in the pelvis. The condition can lead to serious health problems, primarily pain and infertility. Endometriosis primarily develops in women of the reproductive age. more...

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Symptoms

A major symptom of endometriosis is pain, mostly in the lower abdomen, lower back, and pelvic area. The amount of pain a woman feels is not necessarily related to the extent of endometriosis. Some women will have little or no pain despite having extensive endometriosis affecting large areas or endometriosis with scarring. On the other hand, women may have severe pain even though they have only a few small areas of endometriosis.

Symptoms of endometriosis can include (but are not limited to):

  • Painful, sometimes disabling menstrual cramps (dysmenorrhea); pain may get worse over time (progressive pain)
  • Chronic pain (typically lower back pain and pelvic pain, also abdominal)
  • Painful intercourse (dyspareunia)
  • Painful bowel movements or painful urination (dysuria)
  • Heavy menstrual periods (menorrhagia)
  • Nausea and vomitting
  • Premenstrual or intermenstrual spotting (bleeding between periods)
  • Infertile Women present with endometriosis may lead to fallopian tube obstruction despite no history of "endometriotic type" pain.

In addition, women who are diagnosed with endometriosis may have gastrointestinal symptoms that may mimic irritable bowel syndrome, as well as fatigue.

Patients who rupture an endometriotic cyst may present with an acute abdomen as a medical emergency.

Epidemiology

Endometriosis can affect any woman of reproductive age, from menarche (the first period) to menopause, regardless of her race, ethnicity, whether or not she has children or her socio-economic status. Most patients with endometriosis are in their 20s and 30s. Rarely, endometriosis persists after menopause; sometimes, hormones taken for menopausal symptoms may cause the symptoms of endometriosis to continue.

Current estimates place the number of women with endometriosis between 2 percent and 10 percent of women of reproductive age. About 30 percent to 40 percent of women with endometriosis are subfertile. Some women do not find out that they have endometriosis until they have trouble getting pregnant. While the presence of extensive endometriosis distorts pelvic anatomy and thus explains infertility, the relationship between early or mild endometriosis and infertility is less clear. The relationship between endometriosis and infertility is an active area of research.

Anecdotally, endometriosis has been observed in men taking high doses of estrogens for prostate cancer.

Extent

Early endometriosis typically occurs on the surfaces of organs in the pelvic and intraabdominal areas. Health care providers may call areas of endometriosis by different names, such as implants, lesions, or nodules. Larger lesions may be seen within the ovaries as endometriomas or chocolate cysts (They are termed chocolate because they contain a thick brownish fluid, mostly old blood). Endometriosis may trigger inflammatory responses leading to scar formation and adhesions. Most endometriosis is found on structures in the pelvic cavity:

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Diagnosing and managing endometriosis - Tips from Other Journals
From American Family Physician, 3/1/04 by Anne D. Walling

The prevalence of endometriosis may be as high as 45 percent in women of reproductive age. Inpatient treatment costs of endometriosis alone were estimated at $579 million in 1992. In addition, endometriosis is believed to account for a significant proportion of infertility and 97 percent of cases of chronic pelvic pain, which is estimated to have direct medical costs of $2.8 billion annually plus indirect costs of at least $600 million. Winkel provides an overview of the evaluation and management of women with endometriosis.

Endometriosis should be suspected in women with symptoms of pelvic pain, dysmenorrhea, dyspareunia, or infertility, but it may be asymptomatic. Although most patients have normal pelvic examinations, findings can include enhanced tenderness on bimanual examination, nodularity, especially in the posterior cul-de-sac or along the uterosacral ligament, decreased uterine mobility or retroversion, and adnexal masses. No laboratory tests are helpful in making the diagnosis, although serum CA 125 levels may be elevated in severe cases. Imaging studies such as computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, or ultrasonography are useful only if masses are present. Laparoscopy can be misleading if lesions are confused with a variety of pathologic lesions. Histologic confirmation is required. The reliability of a clinical diagnosis is similar to that of one based on laparoscopy with biopsy.

Because pregnancy and menopause are associated with resolution of endometriosis symptoms, most treatments are based on hormonal manipulation. Oral contraceptives used continuously are recommended as first-line therapy in women who have no contraindications to these drugs and who do not wish to become pregnant. Because progesterone causes regression of endometriosis, medroxyprogesterone acetate in a dosage of 20 to 30 mg daily is prescribed frequently. However, daily doses of 50 mg were no more effective than placebo in a 12-week trial and were associated with significant adverse effects. Depot progesterone also has been associated with a high incidence of side effects in 15 to 65 percent of patients. The androgen derivative danazol was reported to induce clinical improvement in 55 to 93 percent of patients treated for six months. However, it also had a high incidence (85 percent) of adverse effects. Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) analogs can induce 85 to 100 percent rates of improvement that last for at least six to 12 months after cessation of therapy. Most of the side effects of GnRH analogs are caused by hypoestrogenism; these effects can be ameliorated by "adding back" low doses of estrogen, progestogen, or both. The add-back regimen should be individualized for each patient. If treatment is continued for longer than 12 months, bone mineral density should be checked at least every 24 months.

Surgery has been advocated as first-line treatment for women with severe pain who wish to become pregnant. Laparoscopic approaches are usually preferred and are as effective as laparotomies. Results of surgical treatment remain controversial. Studies have suffered from many methodologic problems, including multiple different surgical techniques and study designs, and a considerable placebo effect. Besides uncertainty over whether lesions should be excised or ablated by a variety of techniques, the contribution of adjunctive presacral neurectomy or uterosacral nerve ablation-transection is unclear. Radical surgery, including hysterectomy and bilateral oophorectomy plus removal or ablation of lesions, is associated with recurrence in up to 10 percent of women.

The author concludes that endometriosis remains an enigmatic condition for which the outcomes of medical and surgical treatment appear equivalent. He stresses the need to individualize treatment for each patient.

Winkel CA. Evaluation and management of women with endometriosis. Obstet Gynecol August 2003;102:397-408

COPYRIGHT 2004 American Academy of Family Physicians
COPYRIGHT 2004 Gale Group

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