Living With Endometriosis

  • [Home]
  • [About]
  • [What Is Endometriosis?]
  • [Support]
  • [Endo Organisations]

17

Mar

The Good News About Endometriosis After Menopause

Posted by steph 

I love how this article is titled the GOOD NEWS about endo after menopause. I have placed in bold-text the direct contradictions with this woman’s so-called “good news”.

The Good News About Endometriosis After Menopause
Wednesday, 28 February 2007
Shelley Ross

Menopause is a time of life that most women dread, but if you’re an endometriosis sufferer, menopause may be the break you’ve been waiting for. Why? Menopause is a normal part of aging that every woman experiences. It is the time when estrogen levels drop and the ovaries no longer produce eggs. As a result, a woman no longer has a menstruation cycle due to the natural cessation of ovarian function. Menopause is the end of a woman’s reproductive cycle.

Menopause usually occurs naturally for most women when they are in their late 40′s or early 50′s. However, some women may be pushed suddenly into menopause at any age if they have their ovaries removed, or take certain types of chemotherapies for cancer treatment.

Although menopause has its own host of unpleasant symptoms, it has been known to have one positive side effect for endometriosis sufferers — It often puts an end to painful endometriosis symptoms.

To help you fully understand the positive influence menopause has on endometriosis, the following are some answers to common questions regarding the issue:

How does menopause improve endometriosis symptoms?

The hormone estrogen is no longer produced during menopause. Estrogen is what stimulates endometriosis growth. Thus, most women no longer feel pain, as the endometrial tissue no longer grows or breaks down because the menses cycle has ceased.

Does menopause cure endometriosis?

No, you need to understand that menopause does not cure endometriosis. However, for most women, it seems to put it in an eternal state of sleep. Nevertheless, symptoms of endometriosis can still occur at any time, even though for most women not taking hormone replacement therapy this is rare.

Can endometriosis symptoms still occur after menopause?

Yes. For some women, especially those who have a severe case of endometriosis and experienced strong symptoms prior to the stop of their cycle, endometriosis can still persist after menopause, especially if a woman has scar tissue. Often the reason why endometriosis persists is due to hormone replacement therapy that provides the body with estrogen, which is taken by women to help with menopausal symptoms.

Is hormone therapy necessary for menopause?

No. However, some women who go through menopause take hormone replacement therapy to help prevent and treat osteoporosis. Estrogen plays an important role in building and maintaining strong and healthy bones. Lack of estrogen causes cells that build bone to become less active, which increases the risk of bone loss.

Aside from keeping bones healthy, estrogen also plays a big role in keeping the vagina moist, helping it to guard against infection. Thus, many women take estrogen hormone replacement therapy for these reasons. Unfortunately, estrogen stimulates the growth of endometrial implants, which can lead to a recurrence in painful symptoms.

There are different ways you can help treat your menopausal symptoms caused by lack of estrogen without dramatically increasing your risk of reactivating endometriosis symptoms. Talk to your doctor about your condition. He or she may be able to provide you with treatment that limits the amount of estrogen you give back to your body, or they may be able to prescribe creams or other treatments to help with vaginal dryness and other menopausal symptoms.

Published in news article, outrageous

Related Articles

  • The Dangerous Panic over Painkillers (February 1st, 2012)
  • Vitamin D Affects Genes for Cancer, Autoimmune Diseases (January 31st, 2012)
  • Prescription Painkiller Addiction: 7 Myths (November 25th, 2011)
  • Cautious support for aromatase inhibitors in endo treatment (July 10th, 2011)
  • FDA to limit tylenol content in prescription drugs (January 29th, 2011)

No user responded in this post

Subscribe to this post comment rss or trackback url

Search

Don't Have Endo? Please Read!

  • The Letter From Survivors

  • Public Service Announcement!

  • We Are Not Seekers

  • What I Should Have Said

  • "...but have you tried..."

  • Sick Humor: The top ten worst
    suggestions commonly given to
    someone with a chronic illness


  • Our Life In Comics

Important Pages

  • Research and Medical Journals

  • Myths about Endometriosis

  • YouTube Video Blogs

  • Applying For Disability

  • Be Aware!

  • Endo and Menopause

  • Is Endo A Cancer?

  • Job Discrimination

  • Fallen Endo Sisters

Mankoski Pain Scale

0 - Pain Free

1 - Very minor annoyance - occasional
minor twinges. No medication needed.

2 - Minor Annoyance - occasional
strong twinges.
No medication needed.

3 - Annoying enough to be distracting.
Mild painkillers take care of it.
(Aspirin, Ibuprofen.)

4 - Can be ignored if you are really
involved in your work, but still
distracting. Mild painkillers remove
pain for 3-4 hours.

5 - Can't be ignored for more than 30
minutes. Mild painkillers ameliorate
pain for 3-4 hours.

6 - Can't be ignored for any length of
time, but you can still go to work and
participate in social activities.
Stronger painkillers (Codeine,
narcotics) reduce pain for 3-4 hours.

7 - Makes it difficult to concentrate,
interferes with sleep. You can still
function with effort. Stronger
painkillers are only partially effective.

8 - Physical activity severely limited.
You can read and converse with effort.
Nausea and dizziness set in as factors
of pain.

9 - Unable to speak. Crying out or
moaning uncontrollably - near delirium.

10 - Unconscious. Pain makes you
pass out.

© Andrea Mankoski

Organisations

  • Endometriosis Association

  • Endometriosis Research Center

  • endometriosis.org

  • World Endometriosis Foundation

  • Center for Endometriosis Care

  • World Endometriosis Society

Symptom Tracking

  • CureTogether.com - Compare
    symptoms with people like you,
    Find treatments that work,
    Optimize your health

  • ReliefInSite.com - Real-time pain
    mapping, monitoring, analysis

  • MyMonthlyCycles.com - free
    personalized tools to track,
    monitor, and manage your
    monthly menstrual cycles!

Endo Products


  • HagRag.com - cloth
    menstrual pads

  • Lola's Loft - cloth
    menstrual pads

  • Naturally Hip - cloth
    menstrual pads

  • EndoFEMM - Microwavable
    corn-filled cloth heating pads
    (mention you saw them here
    and get 10% off your order!)

  • Bed desk - use for books,
    writing, laptop, eating while
    bedridden from the pain

Endo Blogs

  • Amanda’s Patch
  • Autoimmune Life
  • Barb’s Bumpy Ride
  • Brandzilla, living with endo & IC
  • Canadian Girl In Pain
  • Chronic Healing
  • Cure Endometriosis?
  • Dear Thyroid
  • Endo en Vogue
  • Endo Friendo
  • Endo Times
  • EndoJoanna
  • Endometriosis Interactive Support
  • Endometriosis Journey
  • Endometriosis, Among Other Things
  • Endometriosis: Facing The Battle Head On
  • Endometriosis: The Silent Life Sentence
  • Field Notes from an Evolutionary Psychologist
  • Foxy In The Waiting Room
  • Hope Garden
  • I Will Not Suffer In Silence - My continuing Endometriosis story
  • Jenny With Endo
  • Life With Endo & PCOS
  • light at the end of the tunnel
  • Lupron Journal
  • My Healing Journey
  • My Journey With Endometriosis
  • My Life With Endo & Infertility
  • Resilience
  • Sallie Speaks
  • SansUterus
  • Squidgeaboo’s Endo Blog
  • Stuff Sick People Have To Put Up With
  • Surviving Endo
  • That Girl With Endo
  • The Battle Continues…
  • The Ins and Outs of Endo
  • The Mud and The Lotus
  • Whispered Words …
March 2009
S M T W T F S
« Feb   Apr »
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031  

Categories

  • Administrative (6)
  • alternative medicine (3)
  • autoimmune (5)
  • biology (11)
  • books (3)
  • Chronic Pain (4)
  • diet (8)
  • doctors (3)
  • Endometriosis Awareness (50)
  • Featured (11)
  • government (2)
  • infertility (1)
  • inspirational (2)
  • insurance industry (1)
  • malpractice (3)
  • medical industry (3)
  • news article (70)
  • outrageous (13)
  • pain management (1)
  • pharmaceuticals (13)
  • research (52)
  • Suicide (1)
  • support (4)
  • tips and advice (6)
  • Uncategorized (2)

Archives

  • February 2012 (3)
  • January 2012 (2)
  • December 2011 (1)
  • November 2011 (1)
  • August 2011 (1)
  • July 2011 (1)
  • March 2011 (3)
  • January 2011 (5)
  • December 2010 (3)
  • November 2010 (1)
  • October 2010 (1)
  • September 2010 (2)
  • August 2010 (2)
  • July 2010 (2)
  • May 2010 (1)
  • April 2010 (8)
  • March 2010 (4)
  • February 2010 (10)
  • January 2010 (2)
  • December 2009 (1)
  • November 2009 (4)
  • October 2009 (2)
  • September 2009 (3)
  • August 2009 (4)
  • June 2009 (2)
  • April 2009 (2)
  • March 2009 (38)
  • February 2009 (9)
  • January 2009 (15)
  • December 2008 (12)
  • November 2008 (8)
  • January 2008 (1)

Blog Feed

  • Add blog to any reader

  • Comments RSS

Medical Journals

  • Journal Of Endometriosis


Awards

  •    

Recent Posts

  • Yale researchers find gene mutation on chromosome 12
  • The Dangerous Panic over Painkillers
  • Early detection of endo may soon be possible
  • Vitamin D Affects Genes for Cancer, Autoimmune Diseases
  • Endometriosis in African and African-American Women
  • Interesting read on treatments doctors do not seek for themselves
  • Prescription Painkiller Addiction: 7 Myths
  • Red and processed meat increase risk of bowel cancer
  • Cautious support for aromatase inhibitors in endo treatment
  • Unbelievable doctors in the 21st century
© 2008 Living With Endometriosis is proudly powered by WordPress
Designed by Roam2Rome