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Serenity CC&S

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Joined: 10 Sep 2007 Posts: 3645 Location: Norfolk UK
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Posted: Wed Mar 05, 2008 10:30 am Post subject: Endometriosis |
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Endometriosis is a fairly common condition in which cells that usually line the womb are found elsewhere in the body. It can occur in several places in the body, most commonly including the fallopian tubes, the ovaries, the bladder, the bowel, the intestines, the vagina, and the rectum.
The endometriosis cells behave in the same way as those that line the womb, so every month they grow during the menstrual cycle and then shed blood. Normally before a period, the lining of the womb (the endometrium) thickens in order to receive a fertilised egg. When pregnancy does not happen, this lining breaks down and bleeds, leaving the body as menstrual blood. Endometrial tissue anywhere in the body will go through the same process of thickening and bleeding, but it has no way of leaving the body. The endometrial tissue is 'trapped' which leads to pain, swelling and bleeding wherever the tissue is.
The most common symptom of endometriosis is pain or discomfort in the area where it thickens and bleeds, although some women have few or no symptoms at all. Others can suffer excrutiating pain.
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Last edited by Serenity on Wed Mar 05, 2008 10:37 am; edited 1 time in total |
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Serenity CC&S

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Joined: 10 Sep 2007 Posts: 3645 Location: Norfolk UK
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Posted: Wed Mar 05, 2008 10:36 am Post subject: |
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Symptoms of endometriosis vary from person to person. In some cases there are no symptoms.
However, the most common symptoms include:
painful periods,heavy periods,pelvic pain,pain during sexual intercourse,bleeding in between periods,subfertility (difficulty in becoming pregnant) or infertility, and low backache.Other symptoms may include:
difficulty or discomfort when urinating,bleeding from your back passage (rectum),bowel blockage (if the endometrial tissue is in the intestines), andcoughing blood (if the endometrial tissue is in the lung).How severe the symptoms are depends largely on where the endometriosis is within your body, rather than the amount of endometriosis you have. A small amount of the condition may be just as, or even more, painful than a large amount. _________________
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Serenity CC&S

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Joined: 10 Sep 2007 Posts: 3645 Location: Norfolk UK
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Posted: Wed Mar 05, 2008 10:36 am Post subject: |
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Treatment
There is no known cure for endometriosis, but the aim of treatment is to ease the symptoms so that the condition does not interfere with your daily life. This can be done in a number of ways including through pain medication, hormone treatment, or surgery. Surgery is often keyhole, and the adhesions which are patches that stick the internal organs to each other, can be cut away or lasered.
If you have had children you may want to consider a hysterectomy. _________________
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knewlove CC&S

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Joined: 12 Feb 2008 Posts: 404 Location: Alberta,Canada
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Posted: Wed Mar 05, 2008 6:13 pm Post subject: |
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(March 5, 2008 ) HEALTH Magazine.
Experts: Two-thirds of hysterectomies unnecessary. Alternative procedures can be as effective and with less complications.
By Nancy Larson
Too Many Hysterectomies? One-third of all women get a hysterectomy before they turn 60. Some experts think two-thirds of them don't need it.
Doctors say that more than two-third of hysterectomies each year may be unncessary.
Searing back pain. Endless periods with clots the size of plums. Bloating that turns even your "fat" pants into a tourniquet. Every year, symptoms like these drive thousands of women to consider getting a hysterectomy. The surgery is so popular, in fact, that one-third of all women will have a hysterectomy before they turn 60. For many, the procedure provides real relief.
But here's a shocker: More than two-thirds of the 600,000 hysterectomies performed every year may be unnecessary, experts say. The truth: Several other approaches are available that may have fewer complications and shorter recovery times. And some research suggests that hysterectomy may lead to sexual problems, incontinence, and a slight loss of physical strength. Other studies dispute those findings.
If you ever face this surgery, "ideally, you'll have time to consider all your options," says Lauren Streicher, M.D., a clinical assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Northwestern University.
Health.com: Should You or Shouldn't You Get a Hysterectomy?
The four women profiled on the next few pages each chose a different procedure, with different results. Get to know the possibilities, then talk them through with your doctor.
Endometrial ablation
Shortly after having her tubes tied, Cherry needed two pads and a tampon to make it through even a few hours of her period. "I was bleeding half the month," she says, "and I was tired from being anemic the other half."
Sex -- and life as she knew it -- had stopped. Feeling her uterus had outlived its usefulness, Cherry told her doctor, "Just take it out!"
Then, one day on the Internet, she read about an alternative called endometrial ablation -- removal of the uterine lining but not the uterus -- which would spare her major surgery. Cherry was impressed with the statistics that 50 percent of women never bleed again after having the procedure and 40 percent have lighter periods.
Health.com: Make Over My Period
One day after the procedure, Cherry felt great. That was seven years ago, and she hasn't bled since. "It really changed my life," she says. She's back to being a morning person with energy to spare, and she and her husband enjoy dancing.
Robotic laparoscopic myomectomy
For about a year, Purifoy thought her abdominal cramps came from a bladder infection. "Even the pressure from my underwear hurt," she says. After a pelvic ultrasound revealed a large fibroid (a benign uterine tumor), Purifoy considered having a hysterectomy.
Compared with Caucasian women, African-Americans like Purifoy are thought to be three times as likely to have fibroids. Hysterectomy can permanently solve the problem, but Purifoy felt she was too young to have her uterus removed.
So when her doctor told her about a new, uncommon procedure called robotic laparoscopic myomectomy -- the fibroids are cut out through tiny abdominal incisions using robotic arms and instruments -- she jumped at the idea. It's a more precise type of surgery than traditional myomectomy (in which a surgeon makes a bigger incision and cuts out the fibroids herself) and may improve healing, says David Eisenstein, M.D., senior staff physician in OB-GYN at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit.
Health.com: Your Gyno Questions Answered
Purifoy's recovery was a breeze. There's a risk her fibroids will return, but for now she is symptom-free. "I used to sit up and cry from the pain, but no more," she says.
Laparoscopic hysterectomy
From the age of 15, McClain suffered from excessive bleeding, cramping, bloating-- and anemia from the bleeding. Endometriosis (in which uterine tissue grows outside the uterus), fibroids, and the birth control pills she took for her symptoms made pregnancy impossible. And her condition was hardly conducive to relationships. "I had to put two towels on my bed at night with a garbage bag underneath," she says.
Hysterectomy would have helped, but McClain hoped to have children. So she had nine surgeries for endometriosis and a myomectomy to remove a large fibroid. When her doctor found yet another fibroid, McClain finally chose laparoscopic hysterectomy -- the removal of her uterus using tiny incisions and a minicamera. Recovery time is only about two weeks, instead of the six needed after traditional hysterectomy (which requires larger incisions).
Health.com: Your Guide to Fibroid Fixes
McClain is now pain-free and regrets not having the procedure sooner. "I endured years of pain, holding on to the chance to have children," she says. Her advice: Explore every option until you find one that will deliver the relief you want.
Total hysterectomy
In 1955, Zimmerman's mother took a drug called DES to help her carry a baby to term after four miscarriages. In the early 1970s, doctors discovered a link between DES and cancers of the cervix and vagina. And in the 1980s, studies showed that daughters of women who took DES often had malformed reproductive organs and higher risks of cancer.
Like many DES daughters, Zimmerman suffered for years with severe cramping and leg pain, and she was unable to bear children. (She ended up adopting.) Finally, when she was 45, doctors strongly advised her to have a total hysterectomy with oophorectomy-- removal of her uterus, cervix, and ovaries. She immediately started menopause. "I gained 10 pounds, and I had no sex drive," she says. Her sex drive never returned.
Most experts today say it's unnecessary to remove the ovaries unless cancer risks are high. But there's a good reason to keep them, even if you no longer want children: New research shows ovaries continue to produce testosterone long after menopause, which may affect libido.
Zimmerman suggests that women consider more conservative treatments. "If you've just got a uterus problem," she says, "do not allow them to take your ovaries." _________________
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Serenity CC&S

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Joined: 10 Sep 2007 Posts: 3645 Location: Norfolk UK
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Posted: Thu Mar 06, 2008 10:08 am Post subject: |
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Nice to know there's choices for women that suffer from this. I've never heard of Endometrial ablation! I suppose it's all about getting the right doctor to listen and understand the probs.
Its national Endometriosis week here in the UK this week, and there's been lots on tv about it. It stated that the average time for diagnosis of this condition is 7 years!! Because it isn't always easy to get to the cause of pains especially when they arent local to the uterus. 7 years sounds WAY too long to me  _________________
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