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National Endometriosis Awareness Day

It is for those of you who suffer endometriosis or have friends or relatives who have the diagnosis of this disease. You will therefore know that for many sufferers the path to diagnosis may be long, usually after many general practice and gynaecological consultations, the symptoms being dismissed as simple dysmenorrhoea in a teenager or as a manifestation of unidentified psychological problems.

Usually too there may be a number of poorly monitored and assessed attempts at medical treatment culminating in the use of stronger and stronger analgesics, leading to chronic constipation and fatigue and even addiction.

If you recognise yourself or your friends in this, it is time to take stock of the situation and rescue yourself from this worsening situation.

The Centre for Endometriosis and Pelvic Pain gives you that opportunity. We take a detailed history and offer a thorough, unbiased physical and psychological assessment, which is shared with you. 

The treatments are developed in partnership with you and are based on thoroughly audited results. All our treatments are audited and thus the advice we give you is based on the successes and failures of other sufferers of this difficult disease. 

Detailed information from questionnaires, interviews with you, physical examination and ultrasound, together with findings at any operation and microscopic examination are all carefully collated so that the advice we can give you is based on our data, not individual medical opinion. 

If you would like a consultation please contact Linda Cook on 01483 730343 or visit our contact page.  

The cost of an appointment is £150 and your consultation will last 45 minutes to one hour.


What is endometriosis

Endometriosis is an enigmatic disease. The cause is subject to enormous debate in specialist circles and remains unexplained.

The problem is that endometrial tissue (lining of the uterus) can grow in the wrong place; usually in the embryological developmental part of the uterus, tube and ovaries very early in the embryonic life in the first few weeks of development two tubes of tissue called the Malarian ducts form at the level of the kidneys. 

They grow down to fuse together in the midline to grow into the upper vagina, cervix, uterus, tubes and ovaries. In some people, for whatever reason, it has been suggested, but not proved that small groups or "rests" of cells are left behind and these have the capacity to develop into endometriotic tissue, under the influence of oestrogen once puberty is reached.

These areas of endometriosis can sometimes be recognised at laparoscopy. Laparoscopy is a procedure that is usually carried out under general anaesthetic, which allows a thorough and detailed inspection of the pelvis using fine fibre optic instruments. Some endometriotic lesions are brown or black and obvious but others are more subtle, looking white or like sago grains or small pearls and these are frequently missed by less experienced observers.

The only sure way of diagnosing endometriosis is to submit the tissue to histological examination, which is to fix and stain the tissue and subject it to minute microscopic examination.

Endometriosis is not just the presence of endometrial cells, but also the presence of endometrial glands and surrounding stroma so the important diagnostic feature is the presence of endometriotic tissue not just endometriotic cells. This diagnostic feature alone makes a commonly held theory of causation of retrograde menstruation very unlikely. The theory proposed by Sampson in the early 19th Century argued that endometriosis was caused by menstrual blood passing backwards through the tubes and viable i.e. still alive cells, would implant themselves and grow onto surrounding tissue. However, this theory fails to explain how endometrial glands and stroma can develop. 

Endometriosis is much less responsive to hormones than endometrium in the right place, which is why hormone manipulation is often unsuccessful.

Endometriosis has recently been linked to industrial pollutants such as dioxin, which is an industrial solvent, which has oestrogenic effects. A recent report of an experiment with monkeys developing severe endometriosis sparked off a series of investigations looking at dioxin as a possible cause of endometriosis. This led to fears that dioxin bleached tampons may have been responsible. It is probably not the case, but small quantities of dioxin may be ingested with breast milk and be responsible for some cases. Endometriosis does seem to be more common in areas of high pollution such as Belgium or Hong Kong.

The rationale of treatment needs to be based on a thorough understanding of the disease and sufferers will know the bewildering variety of hormone manipulation available for endometriosis. The effects of treatment are often worse that the symptoms of the disease. These are all based on suppressing ovarian function and with it the cyclical changes in the endometrium, which are part of the female cycle. This suppresses the disease and offers symptomatic relief, but does not tackle the cause.

Surgery, is diagnostic and in many cases may be associated with attempts to ablate the areas of endometriosis, usually by destroying the tissue in any number of different ways but fundamentally heating and destroying the tissue.

A more rational approach is to excise or remove the tissue, which allows one to assess more accurately the extent of the disease and confirm using strict histological criteria, the presence of endometriotic tissue. Dead tissue is not left behind to be absorbed by the body so scarring and distortion is less. Techniques to do this are felt by some to be more complex as the disease may overlie vital structures, such as large blood vessels, the uretur or even areas of bowel. This is why careful planning, assessment and preparation is so necessary and why at CEPP we take so much care to prepare our patients and to be realistic about how we can help.


Training
At CEPP we take training very seriously. Surgeons from CEPP visit other units to help with surgery and pass on expertise. We also welcome gynaecologists to visit us or to bring their patients for treatment. We also invite them to help so that they can learn surgical techniques and improve treatment for women up and down the country. Severe cases of endometriosis may extensively involve the bowel and the expertise of Colo-Rectal surgeons is required when small areas of bowel need to be excised. Thus, close collaboration with colleagues is very important in planning this surgery.
 
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Last modified: March 31, 2005