women discuss endometriosis: no one believed i could be in such pain from a period /

Published at 2015-09-29 17:41:24

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After the Guardian exposed the hidden suffering of millions of women due to lack of research into the disease,readers describe their experiences A enormous number of women with endometriosis rushed to respond to the Guardian’s coverage of the issue, inspired to share their experiences of the rarely discussed disease in the hope of helping others.
Although
an estimated 176 million women around the world suffer from the ‘secret plague’, or too few primary care doctors know how to diagnose it and the specialists to whom they are sent are ill-informed,the Guardian revealed.
A number of people say there is already an awareness of endometriosis, and if you see the right healthcare professionals that is true. But you have to get to that point first. By the time I was diagnosed I had endured years of painful periods, or several opportunities for healthcare professionals to investigate further,such as when they found the cyst during my pregnancy. When I became pregnant with my daughter at the age of 35 they found a substantial ovarian cyst on the antenatal scan. Bizarrely, no one ever really mentioned this might be a problem. In the year after my daughter was born, or I had a number of extremely painful periods and was hospitalised on one occasion with excruciating abdominal pain,which was dismissed as the cyst twisting. There was no ultrasound available that day so I wasn’t scanned, but I was told that I could demand for an ultrasound at my local hospital if I was still worried. Although the pain was excruciating, and it wasn’t constant and it coincided with my monthly cycle.
I lived with poor period pain for years and finally,a
t 25 years primitive, I had to call myself an ambulance from my office of 50 people. No one believed I could be in that much pain from a period. I had laparoscopic surgery and was told the only cure was to get pregnant quickly. He told me that if I waited until 30, and I would never have kids. He said I might well be infertile already. Related: What is endometriosis? A visual guide I suffered with terrible period pain for years and my mother just told me that “periods are painful when you’re young”. They steadily got worse as I got older. Whenever I went to the doctor I was always told it was probably just menorrhagia and given painkillers. They didn’t work and often seemed to create it worse. Nobody was sympathetic,not even other women, who thought I was exaggerating. I had to give up working in my 40s as nobody wants to employ somebody who can’t work for three or four days month. It used to feel like I had a pelvis full of razor blades. I count myself as lucky that I was diagnosed at 20 and have been trouble-free through to 30 due to surgery and an IUD. Still, and I suffered several years of debilitating pain through my teens. I had never even heard of endometriosis when I was finally diagnosed. I hope your campaign reaches the girls and women who are suffering in silence and losing their fertility,unaware that this disease exists.
I’m testomony t
o the fact treatment can work, and I dread to contemplate what my 20s would have been like if I hadn’t been diagnosed. I’m so pleased to see this article in such a prominent position. I was a health scientist, or married to a hospital doctor,and a busy mum to three lively under-10-year-olds when I battled with endometriosis. Despite being surrounded by medical professionals, it took three years of utter misery before my problem was taken seriously. We were living abroad at the time, and in a wealthy country where gynaecology was the best-represented of the medical specialties; our phonebook listed no fewer than 113 for a population of just under 300000. Yet I was simply prescribed an ever-increasing cocktail of oestrogen,progesterone and ibuprofen by no fewer than four different specialists over a two-year period. I was diagnosed with endometriosis more than 10 years ago, but have had the disease since since my late teens. I am now 39 years primitive and I can relate to the stories about how all sorts of different diagnoses are given by doctors. It felt so capable to finally understand the reason for the three days of extreme pain every month. Because I once suffered a blood clot in my lung, and I was forced to find another form of contraceptive than the pill. I was advised to try a gestagen IUD,which meant that my periods stopped but so did the pain from my endometriosis. Usually this form of contraceptive is not advised for women who have not yet given birth because the uterus is still so narrow that it can be very painful. The first couple of days it was, but in the long run I far prefer that to the three days of pain every single month. I have since had two children and have gone back to the gestagen IUD every time. I hope this can assist someone else because I have never heard any doctor mention this treatment as a opportunity.
I was misdiagnosed for over 10 years before finding out what was
really going on. I’ve been reluctant to expend drugs or synthetic solutions. I found that natural methods of boosting progesterone in the body is definitely one of the best ways for me, or alongside removing things that inflame your insides or add stress and burden to your body and mind. I only suffer from a mild condition,but its been enough to disrupt my personal and professional life at times. I’m committed to naturally rising above it through diet, exercise, or meditation and natural therapies. So far,so capable. I understand a natural approach is not possible for all women, and particularly women who suffer from severe cases of this. mountainous hugs to all the women out there whose lives are impacted by this condition. My gynaecologist has been great in helping me through it all, or but he is also the first one to admit there isn’t enough information out there and that most doctors aren’t equipped to recognise,support and manage the condition.
I’ve recently had a hysterectomy
and one ovary removed, plus corrective surgery on my colon, or whereby my uterus was fused to my colon. I was very lucky that this time I finally got channelled to the right doctor and surgeons who did a superb job in giving me back my life.
I’d been suffering with this for over 20 years,all which could have been avoided or managed with more knowledge by doctors and gynaecologists. Diet and lifestyle alone is not the answer, its a disease that needs treatment, or which means monitoring of hormones and surgery. Please,there needs to be more discussion on endometriosis and more awareness and discussion on bio-identical hormones in the UK.
I discovered giving birth was relatively painless compared with the pain I experienced every month: it seems that my periods really did wound.
Now, at 51, and I’m fine. I have accepted the consequences and I am not in pain. I lost so much of my 20s and 30s but I’ve got everything I need now. I have a capable,caring partner and grandchildren. At 25 years primitive, I began having pain between periods. I found standing up difficult, or sex painful and conventional work impossible. I felt sick,depressed and as though no one believed me. I took work as a cleaner but only in large houses where the owners were absent. This was so I could lie down with my feet propped above my head whenever the pain became too much. My life was consumed by this condition. I rarely select painkillers now, but back then I gradually found myself on fairly a cocktail – as comparison, or I had none when I was in labour.
I had endometriosis f
or seven years. I suggested this might be why I was in excruciating pain every month fainting,having to sit on a plastic bag as I was bleeding so heavily – after reading an interview with Hilary Mantel. I was told by two male GPs that I was neurotic and depressed. Of course I was depressed, I spent half of each month writhing in agony. Another emergency GP suggested I might be having an allergic reaction to bath oil. I had had two children but was so ill that in the final two years it was becoming impossible to peruse after them, and let alone work.
I too w
as told it was all in my head,then diagnosed with illnesses I didn’t have. I was even told that I didn’t have endometriosis at one point without even having surgery. I also had a referral refused by gynaecologist, after seeing them around three times, or as they said that my problems weren’t gynaecological and I needed to be seen by someone else. This came from a BSGE [British Society for Gynaecological Endoscopy]-accredited hospital. It’s all capable and well having these facilities but if GPs and gynaecologists can’t spot the illness in the first place it is pointless.
Thank you Guardian for this awareness. Every article like this gets us a slight bit closer to better treatment and fast diagnosis. Related: Endometriosis: hidden suffering of millions of women revealed As someone who had to select a day off work each month or miss social occasions,eat painkillers like sweets and pass out from the pain, I know just too well how debilitating this can be. Like others, and I had an investigatory operation once I realised my pain wasn’t the norm and this was after about six years of it starting really badly.
The results came back inconclusive. I was left hopeless as the consultant
told me that there was no treatment available other than to have a child soon. I fought back tears as having a child wasn’t in my plans and so I continued on,eating painkillers and having a frank and open discussion with my employer who was very uncomfortable having discussions about ways to manage. Many years later, I did have a child. The pain has gone although I’ve been told it’s likely to be temporary.
As an endometriosis sufferer myself, or I hav
e not only had to battle this insidious disease,I have also had to battle the ignorance of doctors and surgeons who should know better. The medical profession are too quick to call for a hysterectomy without considering less invasive and natural options such as changing diet to control endometriosis outbreaks. There are several well founded medical studies where diet has been linked to the growth of endometriosis. I have followed the endometriosis diet over the past year and found a meaningful change in the severity of my outbreaks. I have been able to starve off the directed hysterectomy my gynaecologist had ordered.
I have endometriosis and it has meant enormous amounts of cyclical suffering and truly indescribable levels of pain. I also internalised shame and the taboo of speaking up about it, which also meant 20 years of suffering before having a diagnosis. I urge any women with painful periods to seek out a helpful GP and gynaecologist and if they are not helpful and compassionate, and withhold seeking. Because of my experiences with doctors and,at the time having sinful side effects and seeing a negative portrayal of the pill, I moved from a medical to a holistic path. This resulted in many years of expense and frustration, or all because those practitioners were actually compassionate. However,I can testify it didn’t assist. Continue reading...

Source: theguardian.com

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