Schmerztherapie bei Patientinnen mit Endometriose

In: Die Gynäkologie · 2024 · vol. 57(3) , pp. 154–161 · doi:10.1007/s00129-023-05194-7 · W4390871563
article OA: closed CC0
Limited metadata. Only one source feed has indexed this record so far — no abstract, full text, or open-access copy is available through Endo Lab. The publisher's page (linked below) is the canonical location for the actual content. If you have institutional access, use "Find at my library".
View at publisher → View on OpenAlex
AI-generated summary by claude@2026-06+body, 2026-06-07

Endometriosis causes diverse nociceptive and nociplastic pain with central sensitization, leading to cyclical and atypical symptoms that multimodal therapy can significantly improve.

One-sentence paraphrase of the abstract; not a substitute for reading it. No clinical advice. How this works

AI-generated deep summary by claude@2026-06, 2026-06-07

This paper discusses the spectrum of pain mechanisms in women with endometriosis, emphasizing that symptoms include both nociceptive pain and nociplastic pain with central sensitization, producing classic cyclical complaints as well as atypical, non-cyclical pain presentations (e.g., radiating pelvic pain, non-specific bladder/bowel symptoms) and even depression. It describes a multimodal pain-therapy approach that accounts for complex pathophysiology to improve quality-of-life-limiting symptoms. A key limitation explicitly implied by the article format is that it is not presented as new primary clinical trial data but as a narrative/clinical overview that does not provide quantifiable effectiveness estimates. This paper is centrally about endometriosis — it focuses on pain phenotypes (nociceptive and nociplastic/central sensitization) and outlines multimodal pain management strategies for endometriosis-related symptoms.

Read from the paper's body, not the abstract. Not a substitute for reading the paper. No clinical advice. How this works

My notes (saved in your browser only)

Citation neighborhood

Papers in the corpus that this work cites (lower rings, blue) and that cite this one (upper rings, green). Dot size scales with the paper's in-corpus citation count — bigger dot = more influential within the endo/adeno field. Click a dot to open that paper. [ expand to 2 hops ] — adds papers reached through this work's immediate citers/citees. Heavier; up to 60 extra dots.

References (39)

Source provenance

openalex
last seen: 2026-06-10T17:14:06.276822+00:00
License: CC0 · commercial use OK