Monday, February 27, 2012

what to do, what to do

  So there is yet another study linking  endometriosis to cancer this time different forms of ovarian cancer. So now I really need to think about how quickly I want to move on a hysterectomy. I have now come to terms that it is when not if for me. Ugh just something else that has been weighing heavy on my mind. I am not ready for that to happen just yet.


There has been some new studies that increase the occurrence of three different types of cervical cancer for those of us suffering from endometriosis. Of course this upsets me since a hysterectomy is in my future it is just how long do I have before I need to make that decision.

As per recent information, it has been claimed that women having a back link of endometriosis, a common and widespread, mostly painful situation allied to infertility, have extremely higher rates of three kinds of ovarian tumor, a large study has found - an insight that could help focus future efforts to detect the often-missed cancer.
Compared with women without a history of endometriosis, those who did face the condition had in excess of thrice the threat of compiling clear-cell ovarian cancer, and in excess of double the threat of endometrioid ovarian cancer.
While a lot earlier studies had recommended that both these forms of cancers were associated with endometriosis, the new research has gone a step further to confirm the same. It now adds a third sort of ovarian cancer which is associated with the condition, dubbed low-grade ovarian cancer which, as per medical officials, was around twice as widespread among women having endometriosis than in their normal counterparts.
Endometriosis is likely to affect more than 6% of women in Australian, and more than 15% of those going through chronic abdominal pain. It basically takes place when the tissues that usually line up the uterus start progressing on the outer ovarian walls, bowel, fallopian tubes, and on various other structures close, they result in creating bleeding and swelling in response to their hormones just like the process carried out by uterine cells.
The new research, which was carried out by a team of researchers from over 20 international institutions, counting the likes of the Queensland Institute of Medical Research, compiled the results from as many as 13 earlier studies, including a highly popular Australian study, that mutually enveloped in excess of 23,000 women. - written by  Ria Patel

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