A Case Report on Deep Infiltrating Endometriosis- Endometrioma

article OA: green CC0

Abstract

Abstract Endometriosis a progressive debilitating and estrogen dependent disease is the presence of endometrial tissue (glands and stroma) outside the uterus affecting general mental and social well-being of women¹. In recent times, changing lifestyles, increased awareness and better diagnostic modalities have led to an increase in the incidence of endometriosis. In reproductive age group, endometriosis affects 7 -10% of women and 8-10% of women who are infertile or present with pain abdomen. Also last three decades have seen a significant increase in research related to endometriosis. Endometriotic tissue most commonly implants in pelvic viscera and peritoneum, less commonly involves cervix, hernial sac, umbilicus, laparotomy or episiotomy scars². No mutations are known to cause endometriosis so far. No mendelian pattern of inheritance seen but a multi factorial inheritance is suggested. Daniel Shroen in 17th century first described the disease but definitive cause not known so far with poorly understood pathogenesis and limited therapeutic options which are effective. Various theories ranging from transplantation, metaplasia theory to various genetic and immunologic factors have been proposed. To explain occurrence of endometriosis in cul-de-sac, mainly the Mullerian remnant theory, suggesting that atypical migration or differentiation of these remnants could imitate endometriotic tissue in posterior pelvic floor³. Endometriotic lesions have a variable appearance⁴, typically ranging from superficial red lesions to white to black, dark brown or bluish puckered lesions to atypical yellowish discolorations in peritoneum, can present as subovarian adhesions or endometriomas in ovaries. Women with endometriosis can present with severe dysmennorhoea, dyspareunia, chronic pelvic pain, infertility, painful defecation, premenstrual pain or bleed, ovulation pain etc. and pelvic tenderness, a fixed retroverted uterus, tender utero-sacral ligaments, enlarged ovaries, visible lesions on vagina or cervix on examination (detection improved during menstruation)⁵. The modalities to diagnose endometriosis can very from physical examination, MRI, with TVS playing a very little role and the gold standard is laparoscopy followed by histological examination. Doppler improves the diagnostic accuracy (pericystic flow with resistive index more than 0.45 indicating low resistance waveform).CA 125 has a low sensitivity so not used for screening. Keywords: Estrogen dependent disease; Dysmmenorrhoea; Infertility; Endometriosis; Endometrioma/Chocolate cyst.

My notes (saved in your browser only)

Condition tags

endometriosisdie_deep_infiltratingendometriomachronic_pelvic_paindyspareuniainfertility

Citation neighborhood (no data yet)

We don't have any in-corpus citations linked to this paper yet. The paper's references may be in our DB but unresolved to ``paper_id`` (resolution happens at ingest when the cited DOI matches a row we already have). Run the cross-source citation reconcile pass to retry.

Source provenance

openalex
last seen: 2026-05-10T10:47:42.840129+00:00
License: CC0 · commercial use OK