Farmakologiczne leczenie endometriozy
This paper reviews pharmacological treatments for endometriosis, including first-line options like oral contraceptives and NSAIDs, and second-line therapies such as GnRH analogs, danazol, and progestogens, while also discussing emerging treatments.
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The paper is a 2010 menopause review in Polish that discusses pharmacological treatment options for endometriosis, emphasizing that the condition’s etiology remains incompletely understood and that management decisions depend on symptom severity and reproductive status. It notes that standard diagnostic approaches based on histopathology via tissue sampling may not always be the first step, and that initial symptom control commonly uses first-line therapies such as combined oral contraceptives (often recommended for continuous use) and NSAIDs. If pain is not effectively controlled after at least three months, it describes escalating to second-line options including laparoscopy or treatments such as GnRH analogs, danazol, and progestagens, while also mentioning emerging interest in aromatase inhibitors, TNF-α pathway inhibitors, anti-angiogenesis drugs, and tissue metalloproteinase inhibitors. This paper is centrally about endometriosis — it reviews pharmacological treatment strategies and stepwise escalation in relation to symptom severity and reproductive goals.
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- last seen: 2026-06-10T17:14:06.276822+00:00