Endometriosis Flashcards
1
Q
differential diagnosis for endometriosis
A
- Pelvic pain- ectopic pregnancy, PID, intersittial cystitis, adenomyosis, ovarian neoplasms , pelvic adhesions, IBS, colon cancer, diverticular disease
- Dysmenorrhea-adenomyosis, primary dysmenorrhea, uterine leiomyomas
- Dyspareunia- vulvovaginal atrophy
- Infertility-hormonal imbalance, inadequate sperm etc.
- Bowel symptoms—IBS, inflammatory bowel disease
2
Q
definition of endometriosus
A
- Endometriosis is defined as the presence of endometrial glands and storm at extrauterine sites
- Usually located in the pelvis
- But can occur nearly anywhere in the body
- Common, benign, chronic, estrogen-dependent disorder
- Maintenance of the implants are dependent on the presence of ovarian steroids
- Therefore, diagnosis is commonly made during the active reproductive period
- 25-35 years old most common
- Uncommon on pre/post monarchal girls
- Rare in post menopausal women NOT taking estrogen
- This is a very important thing to remember because it plays a role in diagnosis and treatment
3
Q
common sites for endometriosis
A
- Most common sites include ovaries, anterior and posterior cul-de-sac, posterior broad ligaments, uterosacral ligaments, uterus, fallopian tubes, sigmoid colon, appendix and round ligaments.
- Rarely it has been reported in the breast, pancreas, liver, gallbladder, kidney, urethra, lung, spleen
4
Q
epidemiology
A
- Prevalence in general population is difficult to determine because symptoms are diverse, nonspecific some are asymptomatic
- 12-32% of women of reproductive age undergoing laparoscopy to determine the cause of pelvic pain
- 9-50% of women undergoing laparoscopy for infertility
- 50% of teenagers undergoing laparoscopy for evaluation for chronic pelvic pain or dysmenorrhea
- Higher rates in taller, thinner, body habits and lower BMI
- More common in Caucasian and Asian women
- But some estimates of prevalence based on visualization of pelvic organs include the following
- The role of socio-economic status tends to be controversial. Tends to be dx more in higher scission economic classes—delayed pregnancy as a risk factor? Greater access to medical care?
5
Q
pathogenesis
A
- Leading theories
- Retrograde menstruation/ Implantation theory
- Hematogenous / lymphatic spread
- Coelomic metaplasia
- Direct transplantation
- Combo?
- There are the leading theories for how one may develop endometriosis. But they are controversial and neither of them can fully explain how endometriosis develops or explain why there is such a variation in the sites that are affected, the extent to which damage is done etc.
6
Q
retrograde menstruation theory
A
-
Endometrial tissue reflux into the fallopian tubes and implant on neighboring structures
- Supported by increase incidence in women with genital tract obstructions that prevent expulsion of menses into the vagina
- However, there are women who have endometriosis but no genital tract obstruction
- Does not explain how endometriosis gets into other sites
7
Q
hematogenous or lymphatic spread theory
A
-
Spread to outside location by dissemination of endometrial cells through lymphatics and blood vessels
- Helps explain causes of endometriosis to areas outside the pelvis
- breast, pancreas, liver, gallbladder, kidney/urethra, extremities, vertebrae, bone, peripheral nerves, lung, diaphragm, CNS, nose, aorta
- No evidence of endometrial tissue on blood samples
- Helps explain causes of endometriosis to areas outside the pelvis
8
Q
coelomic metaplasia theory
A
-
Coelomic (peritoneal) cavity contains undifferentiated cells or cells capable of dedifferentiating into endometrial tissue
- Based on embryologic studies demonstrating that all pelvic organs, including the endometrium, are derived from cells lining the coelomic cavity
- explains causes in non menstruating women (turner’s syndrome or absent uterus)
- doesn’t explain how it ends up in organs not in the pelvis
- Based on embryologic studies demonstrating that all pelvic organs, including the endometrium, are derived from cells lining the coelomic cavity
9
Q
direct transplantation theory
A
- Spreads from direct transfer of endometrial tissue
- Explains less common locations like episiotomy scars, abdominal incision, c-section scars etc.
10
Q
combination
A
11
Q
genetics
A
- 7% likelihood of developing endometriosis if you have a first degree relative affected
- Concordance in twins
- There is some link but it is not that strong of a link like you would expect in breast cancer risk, pCOS etc. 1% in unrelated
12
Q
clinical presentation
A
- Pelvic pain
- Severe dysmenorrhea
- Dyspareunia
- Infertility
- Asymptomatic
- Constipation/diarrhea
- Bowel pain
- Ovarian mass/tumor
- Dysuria
- Combination of symptoms
- It’s a wide rang of symptoms it can be anything from extreme pain—periods that are so painful they are having to miss school or work/going to the ER/ even passing out due to pain to being asymptomatic—being discovered only incidentally on imaging, while undergoing laparoscopy or post mortem.
- Many symptoms of endometriosis overlaps with other conditions—PID, interstitial cystitis is et. and this is why there is a delay in diagnosis—some report delays of 10-20 years!
-
Clinical presentation does NOT always correlate to severity of diagnostic findings
- Size of the implants can vary from being microscopic to large masses, but the stage of the disease does not correlate very well to the extensiveness of the disease. This is one of the reasons why it is so hard to diagnose.
13
Q
appearance and size of implants are variable
A
- Superficial implants to pelvic masses to cyst-like structures
- Stage 1: minimal disease—isolated implants and no significant adhesions
- Stage 2: mild enometriosis, superficial implants less than 5 cm in aggreagte, scattered on the peritoneum and ovaries. no significant adhesions
- Stage 3: moderate disease exhibits multiple implants, bother superficial and invasive, Peritubal and periovarian adhesions
- Stage 4: severe disease, multiple superficial and deep implants, including large ovarian endometrioma. filmy and sense adhesions are usually present
14
Q
endometriomas
A
- “Chocolate cysts”
- Contains blood, fluid, menstrual debris
- Differentiated by hemorrhagic cysts because it is lined with endometrial epithelium, storm and glands
- Detected on imaging (US, CT, MRI)
- The appearance varies a lot as you can tell from these slides, not just in color but in shape. Also sometimes the disease is microscopic and there are no visible lesions but when you do pathology you see endometrial tissue.
- If you see an endometrioma, youre automatically a stage 4
15
Q
pathology of endometriomas
A
-
Microscopic appearance:
- Similar to that of endometrium in the uterine cavity
- Endometrial glands and stroma
- Overtime implants will containing fibrous tissue, blood and form cysts