endometriosis pain
endometriosis pain
endometriosis pain
endometriosis pain
endometriosis pain

What is endometriosis pain
and what can be done for it?


Endometriosis is one of the most common gynecological disorders affecting an estimated 5.5 million women in North America. Whether you've been diagnosed with endometriosis, or you've had one or more of its symptoms, it's important to realize that you are not alone - and help is available.

Talking with your doctor about your chronic pelvic pain and other symptoms may be vitally important to a proper diagnosis and treatment.

71 to 87% of women studied with chronic pelvic pain were found to have endometriosis. Scar tissue buildup is thought to be a cause of chronic pelvic pain.

A woman may experience other symptoms including painful menstruation and pain during sexual intercourse.

Among infertile women, about 30 to 45% have endometriosis.

Treatment depends entirely on the extent of the problem. Therefore, it is of utmost importance that you understand the extent of your symptoms before embarking on a treatment program for your endometriosis. If you are unsure of your diagnosis or the severity of your endometriosis condition, you should seek medical advice before beginning any treatment plan.

A number of medications are available to treat endometriosis, and women should discuss their options with their doctors. Through our research, we have developed therapeutic protocols that can provide good results and minimize side effects. As a result, many women with endometriosis can avoid surgery. For women whose pain does not respond to medication, surgery may help. The surgery can usually be done with laparoscopy (a minimally invasive, day surgery), using a number of tools, including a laser.

MOST studies of treatment for endometriosis pain indicate that total relief of pain symptoms is rarely achieved and most patients report significant side effects from the analgesic or antidepressant medications studied.

View Our Audio-Visual presentation about Endometriosis on our Endometriosis Pain Treatment web site... Endometriosis

endometriosis pain So What Can and Should You Do
for Endometriosis Pain?


Understand What is Pain...

Pain is a universal experience. The degree to which you feel pain and how you react to it, however, are the results of your own biological, psychological and cultural makeup. Past encounters with painful injury or illness also can influence your sensitivity to pain and pain treatment as well.

Pain comes in many forms: sharp, jabbing, throbbing, burning, stinging, tingling, nagging, dull and aching. Pain also varies from mild to severe pain. Severe pain grabs your attention more quickly and generally produces a greater physical and emotional response than mild pain. Severe pain can also incapacitate you, making it difficult or impossible to sit, stand, or move.

Chronic pain hangs on after the injury has healed. Pain is generally described as chronic when it lasts 6 months or longer. This is reflected in the word itself. Chronic comes from the Greek word for "time."

As with acute pain, chronic pain spans the full range of sensations and intensity. It can feel tingling, jolting, burning, dull or sharp. The pain may remain constant, or it can come and go, like a migraine headache that develops without warning.

Unlike acute pain, however, with chronic pain you may not know the reason for the pain. The original injury shows every indication of being healed, yet the pain remains and may be even more intense.

Chronic pain can also occur without any indication of injury. Years ago, people who complained of pain that had no apparent cause were thought to be imagining the misery or trying to get attention. Doctors now know that’s not true. Chronic pain is real!!!

endometriosis pain
Understand All about Nerves

Sometimes, chronic pain is due to a chronic condition, as can be the case with arthritis, which produces painful inflammation in your joints, or fibromyalgia, which causes an aching pain in the joints and muscles.

Little is known about why injured nerves sometimes misfire and send painful messages. However, one reason is that when a nerve cell is destroyed, the severed end of the surviving fiber can sprout a tangle of unorganized nerve fibers (neuroma). This bundle of nerve tissue then starts sending spontaneous pain signals. These fibers also refuse to follow normal checks and balances that control the rest of your nervous system functioning to keep pain at bay.

The thinking used to be that pain transmission pathways in the peripheral nerves, spinal cord and brain were hardwired circuits that simply communicated pain signals from injured or diseased parts of the body to message centers in the brain. But based on recent scientific research, there is new knowledge of how pain transmission actually works and how the conscious experience of pain is created in the brain.
endometriosis
Sensitization

Although the neurobiology of sensitization is complex, the basic idea behind it is straightforward. When pain signals are transmitted from injured or diseased tissues, these signals can then activate (sensitize) pain circuits in the peripheral nervous system, spinal cord and brain.

The process of sensitization can be compared to the volume control on your stereo, amplifying and sometimes distorting the pain message. The result is a painful condition that is severe and out of proportion to the disease or original injury. Sensitization may affect all regions of your nervous system that process pain messages, including the sensing, feeling and thinking centers of your brain. When this occurs, chronic pain may be associated with emotional and psychological suffering.

Who Is At Risk?

The world is focused on identifying the molecular and cellular processes that cause sensitization. The results of this research are likely to provide new and better treatments for many types of endometriosis pain. Pain most often affects middle-aged or older adults. However, age is not the only risk factor for adults and children alike. Others factors include genetics, obesity.

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endometriosis pain
endometriosis pain
endometriosis pain