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  Evaluating Your Fertility
  Understanding Fertility
  Maximise Your Fertility
  Infertility: An Introduction
  Infertility in Females
  Impact of Age
  Ovulatory
  Anatomical
  Vulva & Vagina
  Cervix
  Uterus
  Fallopian Tube Damage
  Ovaries
  Endometriosis
  Chromosomal Disorders
  Other Causes (Idiopathic)
  Infertility in Males
  Implications of Infertility
  Questions to Ask Your Doctor
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Endometriosis

Endometriosis is a common condition in which the endometrium proliferates and spreads outside the uterus. It may then implant on the ovaries and other pelvic organs and cause infertility. However, the condition is often relatively benign and many women conceive normally without the condition ever being diagnosed. The cause of endometriosis is unknown, but it has been suggested that it is a disease of angiogenesis (the formation of new blood vessels). This is because, in this disorder, the endometrium, as well as endometriotic plaques, seems to have greater angiogenic activity than the endometrium of normal women.

Endometriosis is thought to compromise fertility by causing mechanical obstruction through pelvic adhesions, distorted anatomy and ovarian or tubal damage. In addition, the ovulatory process and ovum capture may be disturbed. The following figure depicts common sites of endometriosis.

Common sites of endometriosis

 

Types of Endometriosis

There are a number of different classification systems for endometriosis. The most widely used is that of the American Fertility Society in which endometriosis is classified into four stages: minimal, mild, moderate and severe, depending upon the extent of proliferation and the degree of associated scarring and adhesions.

The symptoms of endometriosis may include heavy, painful and prolonged menstrual periods. However, there is little correlation between the severity of symptoms and the extent of the disease. Some patients with extensive endometriosis may not experience any symptoms. The treatment of endometriosis depends upon its severity, whether it is causing infertility and whether it is causing symptoms. Several treatments are available, including both surgery and drug treatment.


Treatment of Endometriosis

  • If the patient is infertile as a result of severe endometriosis, surgery to remove the endometrial growths and free adhesions may be necessary. Laser surgery to burn away endometrial implants and divide adhesions is becoming increasingly popular but requires specialised and expensive equipment. Its advantages are that it is very precise and that the risk of adhesions forming after surgery is reduced. The main advantage of surgery of any type is that if it is successful, conception is possible within a few weeks of the operation.
  • If the patient is infertile but the endometriosis is mild or moderate, the specialist may recommend a trial of medical treatment before major surgery is undertaken. Since it is derived from the normal endometrium, endometriosis is the hormone dependent. Medical treatment therefore depends upon suppressing female hormone secretion for a period of up to 6 months with drugs such as gonadotropin-releasing hormone analogues. During the period of suppression, endometriosis regresses, but unfortunately all current treatments prevent conception. The main problems with suppressive drug therapy are the length of time that it takes (a major problem for older infertile women) and the fact that distressing 'menopausal' side effects may occur during treatment.
  • In infertile women with severe endometriosis, which does not respond to a trial of drug therapy and in whom surgery is contraindicated, the best option may be to use an assisted reproductive technique such as superovulation and intrauterine insemination (IUI), moving on to in vitro fertilisation (IVF).     



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Last Updated: 12/15/2008

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