
Endometriosis Treatment Options to Maximize Fertility
Very painful menstrual cramps, long-term back pain, deep pain during or after sex—does this sound familiar? People may say you’re being a drama queen during your period, but these can be symptoms of endometriosis. Over 6.5 million women in the U.S. suffer from it. Endometriosis is a condition where tissue similar to that in the lining of the uterus grows outside the uterus, and the tissue grows, bleeds and sheds every month the same way your uterine tissue does. It can grow on your ovaries, your fallopian tubes and on other tissues in your abdomen. This often causes swelling and extreme pain during your period or at other times, even during bowel movements, and may cause inflammation. The pain isn’t in your head. It’s real.
Endometriosis can also affect your fertility. No one knows exactly how it does this, according to WomensHealth.gov, the website of the Office of Women’s Health at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Some women with endometriosis do get pregnant. In other cases this extra tissue can block or scar your fallopian tubes, which carry mature eggs from your ovaries to your uterus, or affect your ovaries and uterus. There is some thought that endometriosis may affect your immune system and cause it to attack the embryo.Treatment for endometriosis to improve fertility has evolved in recent years. Surgery used to be the first option, and may still be needed. But repeated surgery is no longer a preferred treatment, and laparoscopy may no longer be necessary. Here are some options to treat endometriosis.

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