Psychosomatische Aspekte der Endometriose – aktueller Stand der wissenschaftlichen Kenntnisse und der klinischen Erfahrungen

review OA: closed CC0 ⤵ 14 in-corpus citations
View on OpenAlex View on PubMed View at publisher
AI-generated summary by claude@2026-06, 2026-06-07

Endometriosis significantly impacts women's education, self-esteem, relationships, and mental health due to pain and intensive treatments, necessitating biopsychosocial integration into care.

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

Abstract

Current therapeutic options allow successful treatment in only part of the women presenting with endometriosis. Pain, fatigue/exhaustion, intensive and repeated therapies as well as a concentration on the disease lead to a variety of consequences concerning education/ profession, body perception, self-esteem, partnership/social contacts, sexuality and psychic well-being. Difficulties in becoming pregnant represent a further central problem in dealing with endometriosis. Therefore, biopsychosocial aspects should be integrated into current somatically oriented models of medical support.

My notes (saved in your browser only)

Condition tags

endometriosis

MeSH descriptors

Endometriosis Endometriosis Evidence-Based Medicine Psychophysiologic Disorders Psychophysiologic Disorders Clinical Trials as Topic Clinical Trials as Topic Endometriosis Endometriosis Endometriosis Female Humans Psychophysiologic Disorders Psychophysiologic Disorders Psychophysiologic Disorders Science Science

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 (35)

Cited by (14)

Source provenance

europepmc
last seen: 2026-06-11T06:19:48.454388+00:00
openalex
last seen: 2026-06-10T17:14:06.276822+00:00
pubmed
last seen: 2026-05-13T22:14:54.534439+00:00
License: CC0 · commercial use OK