I-37: Medical Treatment of Endometriosis inInfertility

author

  • Crosignani PG
Abstract:

There is still not enough evidence that endometriosis per se and infertility are causally related. While extensive pelvic adhesions or the loss of ovarian tissue clearly bears out the causative role of endometriosis this is more difficult in other patients. Several randomized controlled trials and observational studies have in fact reported almost uniform negative results: • spontaneous pregnancy rates were comparable in patients with unexplained infertility with and without pelvic endometriosis;• medical and surgical “suppressive” treatments in patients with pelvic endometriosis did not convincingly change their fecundity; • donor insemination and IVF cycles in women with and without endometriosis did not produce different outcomes. Only a small donor insemination study seems to show an impairment of the quality of the oocytes produced by women with endometriosis. Even patients with rectovaginal implants have apparently normal fertility. Endometriotic ovarian cysts are found in 20-40% of women with endometriosis and may greatly alter the ovarian cortex structure leading to a significant decline of spontaneous and induced ovulation. The most severe defects of ovarian function are seen in cases with bilateral endometriosis. Surgical treatment of the cysts is also associated with a decline in spontaneous and induced ovulation. Frequently endometrioma recurs after ablation but long-term use of oral contraceptives offers specific protection against this risk.

Upgrade to premium to download articles

Sign up to access the full text

Already have an account?login

similar resources

Medical treatment of endometriosis.

Endometriosis is a common, benign and chronic gynecological disorder. It is also an estrogen-dependent disorder that can result in substantial morbidity, including pelvic pain, pro gressive dysmenorrhea, dyspareunia, infertility and repeat surgeries. Endometriosis is often treated surgically upon diag nosis but with a higher rate of recurrence, suggesting that a combination of surgical and medi...

full text

Medical Treatment in Endometriosis

It must to keep in mind that those common administrated drugs couldn’t help to restore the fertility potentials and in fact during their usage pregnancy cannot or should not be happened, regarding to inhibition of ovulation or teratogenic effects; of course by their administration with remission of disease (suppress the growth and activity of previous endometriotic implants) and reducing the ch...

full text

Endometriosis: Medical and Surgical Treatment

INTRODUCTION. Endometriosis is a disease characterized by the presence of tissue that is histologically identical to endometrium at ectopic locations outside the uterine cavity and protean manifestations. The incidence of endometriosis is strongly influenced by the awareness of non-classical lesions and because of the long-standing interest of the group in these lesions. The prominent symptoms ...

full text

I-2: Medical Treatment of Male Infertility

Male factor is the sole reason or a component for infertility in 20 and 30% of cases respectively. Medical treatment is preferred for patients with testicular failure due to endocrine or exocrine diseases. Although the infertility may be due to a pathology in the hypothalamic- pituitary axis, the majority of the cases occurs as results of testicular failure. In general medical treatment modalit...

full text

I-45: Endometriosis and Infertility: SurgicalApproaches to Treatment

The quantity of Infertility in woman reproductive age suffering from endometriosis in Russia is from 15% (V. Baskakov) to 38% (Popov A). But the treatment success not exceeding 45-48% (not randomized). And the correlation between prevalence endometriosis rate and PR is absent. Is There a Role For Hormonal Treatment in Endometriosis- Associated Infertility? Suppression of ovarian function to imp...

full text

Endometriosis: alternative methods of medical treatment

Endometriosis is an inflammatory estrogen-dependent disease defined by the presence of endometrial glands and stroma at extrauterine sites. The main purpose of endometriosis management is alleviating pain associated to the disease. This can be achieved surgically or medically, although in most women a combination of both treatments is required. Long-term medical treatment is usually needed in m...

full text

My Resources

Save resource for easier access later

Save to my library Already added to my library

{@ msg_add @}


Journal title

volume 4  issue 2

pages  37- 37

publication date 2010-05-01

By following a journal you will be notified via email when a new issue of this journal is published.

Keywords

Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com

copyright © 2015-2023