Endometriosis lesions in different locations may cause different symptoms. Often the symptoms are referred pain (pain in a different place than where the endometriosis lesion is located). There is also some information about central sensitization.
Overview
“Clinical manifestations depend on the anatomic locations of the disease.
“Clinical diagnosis by signs obtained from physical examination: Clinical signs of the disease that identified by physical examination (pelvic examination by inspection and palpation) included a broad range of signs. External genitalia and the vaginal surface were usually unremarkable [15]. Findings of physical examination are listed as follows:
“What is most interesting is that right-left orientation of the pelvis does not exist in some patients. That is to say, palpation of a lesion of endometriosis on the left side of the pelvis may produce pain that the patient perceives as being on the right side of the abdomen, and the opposite is also true.”
Low back pain and Sciatic nerve pain (sciatica)
Possover, M. (2017). Five-year follow-up after laparoscopic large nerve resection for deep infiltrating sciatic nerve endometriosis. Journal of minimally invasive gynecology, 24(5), 822-826. Retrieved from https://www.jmig.org/article/S1553-4650(17)30260-1/fulltext?fbclid=IwAR1OzlK62hXEY-TFBIx9flq10cgSjxLLyTOUAMqp0zyo3FBW3v2fgqE3dGA
“In deep infiltrating intraneural endometriosis of the sciatic nerve, patients present with motor disorders before and after surgical resection. The average VAS score was reduced from 9.33 preoperatively to 1.25 at a 3-year follow-up. When full resection of endometriosis including nerve resection is completed, sciatic nerve function recover, but recovery of a normal gait may take at least 3 years and intensive physiotherapy.”
Uppal, J., Sobotka, S., & Jenkins III, A. L. (2017). Cyclic sciatica and back pain responds to treatment of underlying endometriosis: case illustration. World Neurosurgery, 97, 760-e1. Retrieved from https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wneu.2016.09.111
“We report on a 39-year-old gymnast with cyclic sciatica and back pain, whose initial presentation initially led to a spinal fusion at L4/5 and L5/S1, but that procedure did not change her symptoms. Her diagnosis of endometriosis was not made until 2 years after her spinal fusion. Ultimately, once diagnosed with endometriosis of the retroperitoneal spinal and neural elements, her back and leg pain responded completely to hormonal therapy and then to a hysterectomy and a bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy. Because her true diagnosis of endometriosis was unknown and she had some degenerative changes in her spine, she underwent a spinal fusion that would probably not have been done if the diagnosis of endometriosis had been suggested.”
Dongxu, Z., Fei, Y., Xing, X., Bo-Yin, Z., & Qingsan, Z. (2014). Low back pain tied to spinal endometriosis. European Spine Journal, 23(2), 214-217. Retrieved from https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24531988/
“A 33-year-old woman presented with severe low back pain. She had the low back pain periodically for 3 years, and the pain was associated with menstruation. Radiographs showed a lesion in the posterior L3 body. After surgery, tissue biopsy indicated the presence of endometrial tissue in the lesion and thus confirmed endometriosis.”
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