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Dr Malpani,
Malpani Infertility Clinic.
Jamuna Sagar,
Shahid Bhagat Singh Road,
Colaba, Bombay 400 005.
Tel: 91-22-22151065,
91-22-22151066
Fax (India): 91-22-2215 0223

Email: info@drmalpani.com

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Symptoms and Treatment of Endometriosis.

Endometriosis -- The Silent Invader

from the book How to Have a Baby: Overcoming Infertility
by Dr. Aniruddha Malpani, MD and Dr. Anjali Malpani, MD.

Previous page: Hirsutism -- Excess Facial and Body Hair
Next page: Ectopic Pregnancy – The Time Bomb in the Tube
Table of Contents

What is endometriosis ?
What causes endometriosis?
What does endometriosis look like ?
What are the symptoms of endometriosis ?
How does endometriosis cause infertility ?
How does the doctor diagnosis endometriosis ?
What medications are used for treating endometriosis ?
How is surgery used for treating endometriosis ?
How is IVF used for treating endometriosis ?

 

What is endometriosis ?

Endometriosis ( "endo") is a common disorder that affects women of reproductive age. It occurs when normal endometrial tissue (the lining of the uterus) grows outside the uterus. This misplaced tissue may implant itself and grow anywhere within the abdominal cavity.

Many specialists feel that severe endometriosis is more likely to be found in infertile women who have delayed pregnancy and for this reason, the condition is sometimes labeled a "career woman's disease".

Endometrial tissue, whether it is inside or outside the uterus, responds to the rise and fall of estrogen and progesterone produced by the ovaries during the reproductive cycle. Under the influence of the hormones, the misplaced tissue swells; and when hormonal levels drop, the tissue may bleed. Unlike the normally situated endometrium, which is shed from the body as menstrual discharge, this blood and tissue has no outlet. It remains to irritate the surrounding tissue.

You can also "talk" to the Online Endometriosis Expert and ask her your questions by clicking here !

 

The disease is highly unpredictable. Some women may have just a few isolated implants that never spread or grow, while in others the disease may spread throughout the pelvis. Endometriosis irritates surrounding tissue and may produce web like growths of scar tissue called adhesions. The scar tissue can bind the pelvic organs and even cover them entirely. Many women who have endometriosis experience few or no symptoms. However, in some women, endometriosis may cause severe menstrual cramps, pain during intercourse, and infertility.

It is a disease which has been called an "enigma wrapped inside a mystery ", and there is a lot about it that we do not understand as yet.

What causes endometriosis?

What causes endometriosis?
Several theories exist as to how endometriosis begins. One possibility is retrograde menstruation, the backward flow of the menstrual discharge through the fallopian tubes into the pelvis. According to this theory, the endometrial cells may implant on the ovaries or elsewhere in the pelvic cavity.

What does endometriosis look like ?

What does it look like?
Early implants look like small, flat dark patches or flecks of blue or black paint ( "powder-burns" ) sprinkled on the pelvic surfaces. The small patches may remain unchanged, become scar tissue or spontaneously disappear over a period of months. Endometriosis may invade the ovary, producing blood filled cysts called endometriomas. With time, the blood darkens to a deep, reddish brown or tarry color, giving rise to the description "chocolate cyst." These may be smaller than a pea or larger than a grapefruit.

In some cases, bands of fibrous tissue called adhesions may bind the uterus, tubes, ovaries, and nearby intestines together. The endometrial tissue may also grow into the walls of the intestine - but although it may invade neighboring tissue, endometriosis is not a cancer.


Fig 1. Schematic, showing a chocolate cyst (endometrioma) in the right ovary; and peritubal adhesions because of endometriosis


Fig 2. Laparoscopy, showing minimal endometriosis, in the form of " powder-burn" deposits.


Fig 3 . Laparoscopy, showing a small chocolate cyst in the left ovary. This can be very easy to miss, so a careful multiple puncture laparoscopy is essential to make an accurate diagnosis of endometriosis.

What are the symptoms of endometriosis ?

What are the symptoms?
Progressively increasing dysmenorrhea (periods pains or menstrual cramping) may be a symptom of endometriosis. These are caused by contractions of uterine muscle initiated by prostaglandins released from the endometrial tissue. A puzzling feature of endometriosis is that the degree of pain it causes is not related to the extent of the disease. Some women with extensive disease feel no pain at all. A woman with endometriosis may notice that as the disease progresses her periods become more painful or that the pain begins earlier or lasts longer.

Endometriosis can cause pain during intercourse, a condition known as dyspareunia. The thrusting motion of the penis can produce pain in an ovary bound by scar tissue to the top of the vagina or in a tender nodule of endometriosis. Most women who have endometriosis report no bleeding irregularities. Occasionally, however, the disease is accompanied by vaginal bleeding at irregular intervals; or by premenstrual spotting.

How does endometriosis cause infertility ?

How does endometriosis cause infertility? The relationship between mild (early) endometriosis and infertility is controversial. The most recent theories regarding the endometriosis-infertility link focus on the fact that endometriosis may lead to a form of mild inflammation within the pelvis. In some women with mild endometriosis, the levels of certain chemicals called cytokines ( released in response to inflammation) are increased in the abdominal cavity, and these hormones may have a negative effect on follicle and egg development, egg-sperm binding and fertilization, normal tubal function, and even implantation. Sometimes, the endometriosis may be coincidental and unrelated to the fertility problem. In these patients, other factors may be involved in a couple's infertility, such as poor quality sperm or ovulation disorders- and the endometriosis is a "red herring". Some women who have the condition are able to conceive, while others may be infertile due to endometriosis or a combination of factors.

The disease may hinder conception in various ways - especially when it is severe. Endometriosis may inflame surrounding tissue and spur the growth of scar tissue or adhesions. Bands of scar tissue may bind the ovaries, fallopian tubes, and intestines together and thus interfere with the release of eggs from the ovaries or the ability of the tube to pick up the egg. Rarely, severe endomteriosis may cause the tubes to become blocked. The presence of chocolate cysts in the ovary may also impair ovulation.

How does the doctor diagnosis endometriosis ?

Diagnosis
Endometriosis cannot be diagnosed from symptoms alone. While a physician may suspect the disease if an infertile woman complains of severe menstrual cramps or pain with intercourse, many patients with the condition have no discomfort at all. The diagnosis can be confirmed only by a laparoscopy

Laparoscopy enables the doctor to look inside the pelvis and inspect the reproductive organs to confirm the presence of endometriosis. In fact, since endometriosis is often without symptoms, many doctors advise laparoscopy as part of the diagnostic study for all infertile women.

Looking through the laparoscope the surgeon can see the surface of the uterus, tubes, ovaries, and other pelvic organs. He can visually confirm the presence of the endometriosis and gauge its extent. If desired, a small piece of tissue can be removed for microscopic examination (biopsy). It is easy to miss early endometriosis if the laparoscopy is not performed carefully. The entire ovary should be inspected carefully; and if it is enlarged, it should be punctured to look for "chocolate" cysts.

In most cases, the surgeon will treat the endometriosis during laparoscopy. If so, he makes other small abdominal incisions through which additional instruments are introduced for operative laparoscopy. The surgeon may vaporize the lesions with a laser beam , or destroy them with an electric current called diathermy. Ovarian cysts can be excised ( removed) or opened and drained
( marsupialised) and their inner lining destroyed.

However, whether treating the endometriosis surgically actually helps to improve fertility is still a very controversial issue. Sometimes, overenthusiastic surgery may actually decrease a patient's fertility, because the doctor ends up removing a lot of normal ovarian tissue along with the wall of the chocolate cyst.


Fig 4. Operative laparoscopy, for removal of a chocolate cyst of the ovary (endometrioma)

Other imaging technologies, such as ultrasound, computerized tomography or magnetic resonance imaging may be used to get more information about the extent of the disease.  However, these procedures are useful only for identifying endometriotic cysts in the ovary.

What medications are used for treating endometriosis ?

Hormone medication
The goal of hormonal treatment is to simulate pregnancy or menopause, two natural conditions known to inhibit the disease. In each case, the normal endometrium is no longer stimulated to grow and regress with each monthly cycle, and menstruation ceases. The growth of misplaced endometrial tissue usually will suppressed as well.

To simulate the hormonal environment of pregnancy, birth control pills are prescribed. To be effective against endometriosis, the pills must be taken continuously without pausing for withdrawal bleeding. This state is sometimes called pseudopregnancy.

The hormone derivative danazol is the medication most frequently used to treat endometriosis. During treatment with danazol, estrogen levels are reduced to the low levels characteristic of natural menopause. This state is sometimes called pseudomenopause. Danazol is an expensive medication which is usually prescribed for six months or more. Unfortunately, large endometriotic cysts of the ovary are generally resistant to the drug.

Analogues of GnRH, the gonadotropin releasing hormone, are the newest class of hormones used for endometriosis treatment. Brand names include Lupron and Synarel. These analogues switch off production of FSH and LH from the pituitary, thus inducing a menopausal state. These analogs can be given in the form of special injections called depot preparations, which release small quantities of the drug daily, allowing administration at monthly intervals.

Medical therapy used to be prescribed in the hope that it would cause the endometriosis to shrink sufficiently so that it would no longer interfere with conception after the treatment is stopped. However, since pregnancy cannot occur during the medical therapy of endometriosis, and because the treatment has been shown not to be helpful in improving fertility, medical therapy for endometriosis is no longer advised for infertile patients.

How is surgery used for treating endometriosis ?

Surgery
Treating endometriosis with medicines has definite limitations. Medication usually controls mild or moderate pain and may eliminate small patches of the disease. But large chocolate cysts in the ovary are less likely to respond, and drugs cannot remove scar tissue. This is why surgery may be needed to improve fertility by removing adhesions, lesions, nodules or endometriomas.

As described earlier, laparoscopy can be used as a therapeutic tool. For example, fluid can be drained ; adhesions freed; and patches of endometriosis destroyed using a laser or electrical current. Even large endometriomas can be removed through the laparoscope by a skilled surgeon, so that today most cases can be successfully treated through the laparoscope. Open surgery (laparotomy) is needed only very rarely.

How is IVF used for treating endometriosis ?

IVF
Treatment cannot "cure" endometriosis - but it can control it. If an infertile woman with endometriosis fails to conceive even after surgical treatment, the next option is superovulation with intrauterine insemination, since the fallopian tubes in these patients are usually open. If this fails, then IVF ( in vitro fertilization ) can be very useful. However, the ovarian response in some of these patients can be poor, especially if they have large chocolate cysts, or have had surgery for these cysts. Fertilization rates in some patients with endometriosis can be a little lower than for other patients, perhaps because of an intrinsic oocyte abnormality.

Endometriosis is a disease affecting millions of women throughout the world. For many, the condition goes unnoticed. But for others it demands professional attention, especially when fertility is impaired. The best strategy to maximize chances of conception is to select a specialist who is familiar with the latest developments in endometriosis management.

 

Next page: Ectopic Pregnancy – The Time Bomb in the Tube

Previous page: Hirsutism -- Excess Facial and Body Hair

Table of Contents


Fertility Basics

Making Babies

Are you infertile

Basic medical tests

Ultrasound

Wasteful Infertility Tests

Finding the Right Doctor

Making the Most of your Doctor

How to use the internet


The Infertile Man

Male Infertility

Low sperm count

Semen analysis

ICSI

Donor Insemination
The Infertile Woman

Female Infertility

The older woman

PCOD

Endometriosis

Recurrent miscarriages

Ectopic pregnancy

TORCH infections

TB and infertility

Fibroids

Ovarian cysts

Ovulation

Irregular periods

Hirsutism

Secondary Infertility
Treatments

Laparoscopy

Hysteroscopy

Medications

IUI ( Insemination)

Alternative Medicine
IVF

IVF

ICSI

PGD

Failed IVF

OHSS

Beta HCG

Egg Donor

Embryo Adoption

Surrogacy

Free IVF videos
Coping with infertility

Coping with Infertility

Stress and Infertility

Making the right Decisions

Ethical issues

Cost of treatment

Adoption

Sexuality and Infertility

Support Groups

Infertility Myths
Free infertility resources

Free Fertility Calculator

Free IVF calendar

Free Second Opinion

Infertility Store

Free Online Book

Free IVF videos

What to Expect when you aren't quite expecting

IVF E-learning course

IVF Comic Book