how i cured my adenomyosis

  • ADENOMYOSIS DIAGNOSIS: Natural treatment

    Adenomyosis is usually defined as endometriosis internal to the uterus. In fact, it is an abnormality in the junction area between the endometrium (the mucous membrane that lines the uterus) and the myometrium (muscle of the uterine wall) that will allow endometrial cells to infiltrate the myometrium. It can be superficial (thickening of the area up to 12 mm) or deep (painful).

     The typical age of onset is between 35 and 50 years old but can affect younger women. Although the incidence of endometriosis is estimated to be between 6% and 10% of all women and around 30% to 35% of those with pelvic pain and infertility, the incidence of adenomyosis is still questionable in due to different diagnostic imaging criteria - some estimates show around 70% adenomyosis in patients with endometriosis compared to 9% in healthy ones.

     

    Natural remedy

    This natural herbal treatment for adenomyosis will remove the pain you feel during your period and allow you to have normal cycles. It outperforms conventional treatments that relieve pain, but don't get to the root of the pain. This herbal tea contains plants that reduce the level of estrogen in the blood. This helps block the proliferation and bleeding of adenomyosis lesions. These herbal remedies are rich in antioxidants that inhibit enzymes that lead to pro-inflammatory prostaglandins. These are nutrients in high anti-inflammatory doses. This will definitely put an end to the pain you feel during your period. We know that many of you have had adenomyosis treatment or surgery, but the pain returned years later. Rest assured, it is without risk or side effects. You will be permanently cured of adenomyosis.
    This natural herbal tea also facilitates cell multiplication relating to fertility, growth, healing, and immunity; to the synthesis and secretion of many hormones. To discover this product, click on the image.

    Our contacts: +33644661758 or +22990312738

    adénomyose

     

    Typical symptoms are:

    1. Menorrhagia (bleeding in small amounts);

    2. pelvic pain;

    3. Dysmenorrhea (pain associated with menstruation).

    In addition, the coexistence of adenomatosis and endometriosis makes it relatively impossible to delimit the symptoms specific to each type of pathology.

    However, in other studies, only 27% of patients with endometriosis also experienced adenomyosis on preoperative MRI scans. Diffuse and discrete foci of adenomyomatosis were also identified in 54% of young women with infertility and dysmenorrhea and/or menometrorrhagia.

    Although it was initially stated that the clinical diagnosis of patients with adenomyosis is relatively straightforward, for about a century the diagnosis of adenomyomas and later adenomyosis was exclusively RETROSPECTIVE and based solely on the section of the uterus after hysterectomy and histopathological evaluation of the myometrium.

    However, for more than a quarter of a century, modern diagnostic possibilities have changed considerably, including preoperative diagnosis, which is usually particularly accurate.

     

     

    Clinical diagnosis

    The main details of the diagnosis refer to two major symptoms:

    - Long menstrual bleeding → which turns as the disease progresses to continuous bloody leaks

    - A significant painful pathology. Now, however, it has been concluded that an eminently clinical diagnosis is practically empirical. Looking at the total number of cases in which a hysterectomy was performed for any indication, adenomyosis was found in 11.2% of them.

    The diagnosis of adenomyosis is usually elusive until histologic confirmation can be used in hysteroscopy and histopathology, supplemented by ultrasound endovaginal examination. Hysteroscopy not only makes it possible to visualize the pathognomonic signs of adenomyosis (endometrial irregularities, vascular anomalies, hemorrhagic lesions), but also the biopsy. Endovaginal ultrasound is the possibility of a preoperative diagnosis in the hands of a qualified imagist and in the context of clinical suspicion.

    MRI signals the ectopic presence of endometrial cells ("adeno") and excludes additional pathology, classifying the disease according to its severity.

    The link between adenomyosis and endometriosis is extremely difficult to define, most often these two overlaps. In addition, the association with uterine fibromatosis is relatively common, and the situations in which the patient is diagnosed with adenomyosis with infertility are very numerous.

     

    Medical treatment

    Adenomyosis may disappear after the onset of menopause, suggesting that treatment would depend on the stage and age of the patient as well as the patient's desire to maintain fertility.

    The treatment options would be:

    - Anti-inflammatory drugs: Ibuprofen administered 1 to 2 days before the onset of menstruation and during it; it would reduce menstrual flow and help relieve painful symptoms;

    - Hormonal drugs: the hormonal contraceptive pill or the hormonal "patch" or even the vaginal contraceptive ring positively influence the frequency of menstrual flow and the intensity of pain symptoms. Contraception only with progesterone, such as intrauterine devices or a continuous contraceptive pill (which induces amenorrhea - absence of menstruation) is therefore a beneficial therapeutic attitude.

    - Hysterectomy - removal of the uterus: in the context where the intensity of the pain is exacerbated, the attending physician may indicate this method without removal of the ovaries.

    - Ablation (endometrial ablation) - an alternative to hysterectomy, is generally not valid for the treatment of adenomyosis, as it destroys only the endometrial area, and not the endometrial cells located in the thickness of the myometrium.

    - Embolization of uterine arteries - traditional treatment for fibroids, can help by reducing blood flow to tumor formations, reducing symptoms.

    - Magnetic resonance - focused on the lesion areas - used in patients who wish to preserve their fertility.

    Complications in the absence of treatment

    Increasingly, patients treating infertility are suspected of having adenomyosis, but this is inconclusive (it may simply be a corollary to the fact that they are older when the incidence of adenomyosis is higher. higher).

    Theoretically, adenomyosis is a structural disorder, so it can impact fertility, but there is insufficient evidence to confirm this.

    In theory also, adenomyosis increases the risk of complications.

    The necessary or true adenomyosis 'test stone' is effectively diagnosed in gynecology in dirty and severe forms, which can form the treatment of hysterectomy (removal of the uterus), so that the woman is in pre-menopause and post-menopause.

     

    Our contacts: +33644661758 or +22990312738