Clinical and anamnestic aspects of adenomyosis
This study analyzed 90 reproductive-aged women with adenomyosis, identifying burdened heredity, extragenital pathology, menstrual cycle disorders, and a history of gynecological interventions as potential predictors.
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This study conducted a clinical-statistical analysis of 90 reproductive-age women with adenomyosis and compared them with 30 gynecologically healthy reproductive-age controls, using a numeric pain scale to characterize illness features and identify potential predictors. Among women with adenomyosis, 88.9% had a burdened hereditary history, and the most frequent extragenital comorbidities were respiratory system disorders (46.7%) and gastrointestinal diseases (42.2%); clinically, 100.0% had menstrual cycle disturbances and dyspareunia was reported by 65.5%, with a history of inflammatory uterine/adnexal processes (52.2%) and cervical pathology (46.7%) also common. The paper reports reproductive and obstetric/anamnestic factors including high frequencies of induced abortion (77.8%), plus rates of spontaneous pregnancy loss (20.0%) and ectopic pregnancy (8.9%), and it lists prior intrauterine procedures such as endometrial scraping, hysteros resectoscopy, and various uterine or cervical/adjacent operations. The paper’s limitation is that it is based on a case-control statistical association rather than prospective causal testing, and it frames these factors as a “favorable background” for adenomyosis progression rather than proving causality. This paper is centrally about endometriosis and/or adenomyosis — it specifically focuses on adenomyosis clinical and anamnestic predictors in reproductive-age women.
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