Hello, I am 21 years old and have recently been diagnosed
with endometrial hyperplasia, endometriosis, fibroids, and PCOS.
Not exact matches
[33] Thus, although the data varies, it is generally agreed upon by most gynecological societies that due to the high estrogen levels that women
with PCOS have, they are at higher risk for
endometrial hyperplasia.
Endometrial hyperplasia is sometimes treated
with progestin (via pills, shots, cream, or an IUD) to shed the thickened lining.
«High dose consumption of commercially available preparations containing daidzein or puerarin may expose women
with an intact uterus to the risk of
endometrial hyperplasia.»
I ask my patients about contraindications including blood clots, pregnancy, moderate to severe endometriosis, enlarging fibroids or associated
with heavy bleeding, gallbladder disease, liver disease (because the liver processes estrogen and sends it to the gut via bile), unexplained vaginal bleeding, atypical
hyperplasia of the breast, some types of estrogen - sensitive breast cancer,
endometrial cancer, ovarian cancer.
I was diagnosed
with complex
endometrial hyperplasia in January of 2014.
Other early research shows that a specific intravaginal progesterone cream may help reverse abnormal thickening of the endometrium and decrease vaginal bleeding in premenopausal women
with non-cancerous
endometrial hyperplasia.
For reducing vaginal bleeding and reversing the thickening of the lining of the uterus in premenopausal women
with noncancerous
endometrial hyperplasia: a dose of 100 mg progesterone cream placed inside the vagina daily from day 10 to day 25 of a 28 - day cycle has been used.
Some research suggests that applying progesterone (Crinone) into the vagina prevents
endometrial hyperplasia in women
with an intact uterus that are taking estrogen replacement therapy.
So we go from a normal uterus... and this start's
with the first cycle of her life... to an endometritis to
endometrial hyperplasia, which some of you have been asking about - this is when the uterus starts to thicken and we start to get bubbles in the lining of the uterus - these changes affect the uterine lining so much so that eventually the uterus can not control the bacteria, and the ultimate end stage is pyometritis.