Diagnosis and Management of Endometriosis

In: Handbook of Gynecology · 2016 · pp. 1–10 · doi:10.1007/978-3-319-17002-2_29-1 · W4246662098
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Endometriosis, affecting 10% of reproductive-age women, involves endometrial tissue outside the uterus, causing pain and infertility, with diagnosis confirmed histologically and treatment individualized.

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This paper is a review/handbook chapter describing endometriosis as a chronic, benign condition affecting up to 10% of reproductive-age women, characterized by endometrial glands and stroma outside the uterus, with common clinical associations of dysmenorrhea, pelvic pain, and/or infertility. It outlines diagnostic approaches—history and physical exam suggesting disease, with histologic confirmation from surgical biopsy as the gold standard—and notes that intraoperative staging does not always correlate with symptom severity. It summarizes management options spanning pain management, hormonal suppression, and/or surgical intervention, emphasizing that treatment should be individualized to symptoms and future fertility plans, while acknowledging ongoing investigation into pathogenesis and potential treatments. This paper is centrally about endometriosis — it focuses on diagnosis and management of endometriosis.

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Abstract

Endometriosis is a chronic, benign gynecologic condition, affecting up to 10% of reproductive-age women. It is characterized by the abnormal presence of endometrial glands and stroma outside of the uterus. Clinically, endometriosis is associated with dysmenorrhea, pelvic pain, and/or infertility. The diagnosis of endometriosis can be suggested based on history and physical examination, but the gold standard for diagnosis is histologic confirmation from a surgical biopsy. The stages of endometriosis are determined based on the extent of disease intraoperatively. However, the stages of disease do not always correlate well with symptom severity. Treatments include pain management, hormonal suppression, and/or surgical intervention. Treatment decisions must be individualized to each patient, taking into consideration her symptoms and her plans for future fertility. Endometriosis presents a challenging problem to affected women and their gynecologists. As such, there continues to be investigation into the pathogenesis and potential treatments of the condition. Similar content being viewed by others

References

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