AGE, UTERINE WALL LOCALIZATION, AND LIFESTYLE-RELATED FACTORS IN WOMEN WITH ADENOMYOSIS
This study examined 30 women with adenomyosis, finding that lifestyle factors like stress and sleep deprivation correlated with diffuse disease presentation and increased imaging findings.
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This descriptive-analytical study evaluated ultrasound- and/or MRI-confirmed adenomyosis in 30 women, examining how age, BMI, prior uterine interventions, and lifestyle-related factors relate to uterine wall localization patterns. Localization was diffuse or multi-wall in 40% of cases, posterior in 26.7%, and anterior and lateral-fundal in 16.7% each, while chronic stress (60%), low physical activity (53.3%), and sleep deprivation (50%) were common. A 0–5 point risk index based on five lifestyle-related factors showed that 7 of 9 high-risk women had diffuse adenomyosis, with higher mean numbers of ultrasound findings (4.9±0.8) and greater junctional zone thickness on MRI (14.7±1.8 mm) than in the low-risk group (2.9±0.9; 9.8±1.4 mm). The study’s limitation, as implied by its design, is its small sample size (n=30) and observational nature, and it does not establish causality. This paper is centrally about adenomyosis — it links age, uterine wall localization, and quantified lifestyle-related factors to adenomyosis imaging severity.
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- last seen: 2026-06-28T06:02:12.919550+00:00