Get Prompt Treatment For Endometriosis Cysts

By Amanda Clark

Nearly five million American women suffer from a condition known as endometriosis. This disease results when uterine tissue, which usually is sloughed off during the menstrual period, instead migrates to other parts of the reproductive system, often causing extreme pain and developing into endometriosis cysts.

The causes of endometriosis are not well understood, although the most recent research seems to indicate that genetics plays a big role in the condition. Women whose mothers, sisters, or other close female relatives have endometriosis are seven times more likely to develop the condition themselves. Other signs of susceptibility to endometriosis include starting periods at an early age and having heavy periods or periods longer than seven days.

While its causes may be obscure, the results of endometriosis, such as endometriosis cysts, are both detectable and painful. In fact, extreme abdominal pain is one of the major symptoms of endometriosis. Other symptoms can include heavy menstrual periods, severe menstrual cramps, chronic pelvic pain or pain in the lower back, painful sexual intercourse, uncomfortable urination or bowel movements during menstrual periods, bleeding or spotting between periods and infertility, or the inability to conceive and bear a child.

Thankfully, endometriosis cysts usually aren't cancerous. They also usually stay somewhere in a woman's reproductive organs and don't migrate to places like the lungs or liver. Sometimes endometriosis cysts can develop on the bowels or bladder, however, because these organs lie so near the reproduction organs.

In severe cases, a woman may become completely disabled by the pain of endometriosis, or she may suffer burst or bleeding endometriosis cysts. When these situations occur, her gynecologist may recommend immediate surgery, either by the laparoscopic method or by major abdominal surgery. Sometimes it's possible to remove the endometriosis without removing a woman's reproductive organs, but in severe cases the only relief is a complete hysterectomy.

See your gynecologist immediately if you're suffering from symptoms that resemble endometriosis. Only your physician can diagnose your illness properly and recommend the right treatment. - 30428

About the Author:

Sign Up for our Free Newsletter

Enter email address here