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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:

Read more at Wikipedia.org


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The link between diet and endometriosis
From Shape, 4/1/05

A diet high in beef and low in fruits and vegetables may boost your risk of endometriosis, a painful, chronic pelvic disease that can lead to infertility. In a study in Human Reproduction, researchers compared 504 healthy women and 504 women with endometriosis, a condition in which tissue that normally lines the uterus grows elsewhere in the pelvis. Women who ate beef daily were nearly two times as likely to have endometriosis, while those who consumed seven or more fruit and vegetable servings a week were at least 40 percent less likely.

However, it's too soon to change your eating habits based on one report. Some experts theorize there may be a genetic disposition to endometriosis and that no lifestyle or dietary changes will prevent its development. If you experience pain a few days before your period, pain during intercourse or painful urination or bowel movements during your period, tell your physician. To keep abreast of research, visit www.endometriosisassn.org.--K.D.

COPYRIGHT 2005 Weider Publications
COPYRIGHT 2005 Gale Group

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