A clinical and immunological rationale for ultrasonic cavitation use in the complex treatment of infertility in chronic endometritis
Ultrasonic cavitation of saline in women with chronic endometritis improved endometrial thickness, immune markers, cytokine balance, and microbial profiles, suggesting clinical and immunological efficacy for infertility treatment.
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This paper studied whether irrigation of the uterine cavity with ultrasonic cavitated 0.9% sodium chloride solution is safe and effective for improving endometrial receptivity, local immune balance, and antioxidant status in 52 women (ages 23–38) with histologically and immunohistochemically confirmed chronic endometritis and a history of reproductive losses, compared with 45 infertile controls without CE confirmation. Endometrial structure and immune markers were assessed in tissue by immunohistochemistry (including CD138+, CD20+, CD56+, and ER/PR), while cytokines (IL-2, IL-10, IL-8, TNF-α, IL-1β, IFN-γ, IFN-α) and oxidative stress parameters were measured in uterine cavity contents by ELISA and spectrophotometry, respectively, with microbiological composition evaluated by PCR-based testing. After 6 treatment sessions over 3 months, ultrasound showed increased luteal-phase endometrial thickness, ER/PR ratio normalization, decreased CD138+/CD20+/CD56+ cell counts, improved pinopod maturation, restored cytokine balance, reduced lipoperoxidation products, increased antioxidant enzyme activity, and lower colonization by selected pathogenic/opportunistic microorganisms with increased Lactobacillus. The paper’s main limitation is that sample size was not pre-calculated and the study is open-label/prospective randomized, without detailed reporting in the provided text about blinding or adverse-event monitoring. Relevance to endometriosis: chronic endometritis is a condition associated with infertility and reproductive losses that the authors discuss as part of the inflammatory and immunological milieu relevant to implantation, though the paper’s title and methods focus on chronic endometritis rather than endometriosis or adenomyosis specifically.
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