Kunz G

No ORCID on file · 16 papers in corpus · active 1996-2011

Study types

  • article 7
  • review 6
  • other 3

Condition tags

  • endometriosis 16
  • adenomyosis 10
  • infertility 7
  • dysmenorrhea 2
  • chronic_pelvic_pain 1
  • dyspareunia 1
article 2011
Gynecological surgery ·doi:10.1007/s10397-011-0723-3

Since the dissociation between adenomyoma and endometriosis in the 1920s and the laparoscopic progress in the diagnosis and surgery of endometriosis, the literature has been greatly focused on the disease endometriosis. The study of adenomy…

other 2010
Archives of gynecology and obstetrics ·doi:10.1007/s00404-009-1285-8

PURPOSE: The uterine junctional zone as documented by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has shown to be of significance with respect to the early process of human reproduction. In this study, MRI findings were related to the outcome of an IV…

article 2007
Reproductive biomedicine online ·doi:10.1016/s1472-6483(10)60535-4

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) allows the diagnosis of adenomyosis in vivo with a high sensitivity and specificity. Usually the diagnosis of adenomyosis is obtained from women in their fourth to fifth decade of life. However, recent data …

article 2007
European journal of obstetrics, gynecology, and reproductive biology ·doi:10.1016/j.ejogrb.2007.01.015

ObjectiveEnlargement of the junctional zone (JZ) on T2-weighted resonance imaging of the uterus has recently been established as the major criterion for adenomyosis in patients with endometriosis. This study was conducted to analyse the ext…

review 2007
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences ·doi:10.1196/annals.1389.036

The uterus is composed of different smooth muscle layers that serve various functions. First, menstrual debris is expulsed at the time of the menses. Second, sperm is transported in the preovulatory phase to maximize fertility, and third, t…

review 2006
Best practice & research. Clinical obstetrics & gynaecology ·doi:10.1016/j.bpobgyn.2006.01.008

Evidence has been provided that pelvic endometriosis is significantly associated with uterine adenomyosis and that the latter constitutes the major factor of infertility in such conditions. Furthermore, it has become evident that both adeno…

article 2006
BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology ·doi:10.1111/j.1471-0528.2006.00970.x

OBJECTIVE: Uterine hyperperistalsis and dysperistalsis are common phenomena in endometriosis and may be responsible for reduced fertility in cases of minimal or mild extent of disease. Since a high prevalence of adenomyosis uteri has been w…

article 2005
Human Reproduction ·doi:10.1093/humrep/dei021

BACKGROUND: The hypothesis is tested that there is a strong association between endometriosis and adenomyosis and that adenomyosis plays a role in causing infertility in women with endometriosis. METHODS. Magnetic resonance imaging of the u…

review 2005
Zentralblatt fur Gynakologie ·doi:10.1055/s-2005-836885

Peristaltic activity of the non-pregnant uterus serves fundamental functions in the early process of reproduction. Hyperperistalsis of the uterus is significantly associated with the development of endometriosis and adenomyosis. In women wi…

review 2004
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences ·doi:10.1196/annals.1335.036

Peristaltic activity of the nonpregnant uterus serves fundamental functions in the early process of reproduction, such as directed transport of spermatozoa into the tube ipsilateral to the dominant follicle, high fundal implantation of the …

other 2002
Human Reproduction ·doi:10.1093/humrep/17.10.2725

BACKGROUND: The hypothesis is tested that both adenomyotic and endometriotic lesions are derived from basal endometrium. METHODS: Normal uteri and uteri with adenomyosis obtained by hysterectomy, excised endometriotic lesions and menstrual…

review 2002
Reproductive biomedicine online ·doi:10.1016/s1472-6483(12)60108-4

Unlike other smooth muscle organs, the uterine muscle was regarded to be normally functional for only a brief period, following a lengthy gestation. However, recently it has been shown that uterine peristalsis constitutes one of the fundame…

article 2000
Human Reproduction ·doi:10.1093/humrep/15.1.76

In women with endometriosis, the peristaltic activity of the uterus is significantly enhanced and may even become dysperistaltic at midcycle. Since uterine peristalsis is confined to the endometrium and the subendometrial myometrium with it…

review 1998
Human reproduction update ·doi:10.1093/humupd/4.5.752

Endometriosis is considered primarily a disease of the endometrial-subendometrial unit or archimetra. The clinical picture of endometriosis characterises this disease as a hyperactivation of genuine archimetrial functions such as proliferat…

article 1997
Advances in experimental medicine and biology

Rapid as well as sustained sperm transport from the cervical canal to the isthmical part of the fallopian tube is provided by cervico-fundal uterine peristaltic contractions that can be visualized by vaginal sonography. The peristaltic cont…

other 1996
Human Reproduction ·doi:10.1093/oxfordjournals.humrep.a019435

Women suffering from infertility in association with mostly mild endometriosis were subjected to vaginal sonography of uterine peristalsis during the menstrual period, the early, mid- and late follicular phases, and the mid-luteal phase of …