Yes.
You can have PCOS and endometriosis at the same time, but one does not mean you have the other.
Hysterectomy does not guarantee a relief from symptoms or from endometriosis. Surgery is surgeon dependent. If all the endometriosis is not removed as the same time as the removal of your uterus and your ovaries, the patient may still have endometriosis after this procedure.
You will weigh 70 Pounds. ibs is the same as pounds, kind of, so it will be 70 pounds or 70 ibs
IBS is connected with sexual fitness in that many people with IBS are unable to achieve an erection or complete a sexual act.
Yes it can be, if you notice severe fatigue beginning to accompany your IBS symptoms its time to find an LLMD or a ND
It may come back. Your pain may be less, more, or the same. Check out the Endometriosis Association at endometriosisassn.org and Mary Lou Ballweg's book, Endometriosis: The Complete Reference for Taking Charge of Your Health for more info.Good luck!
No.
Are you a woman? Sometimes endometriosis is misdiagnosed as IBS. Endo is an immune system and hormonal disease that affects women and girls. Pain is the most common symptom (many start with "killer cramps" just during their period). Gastrointestinal symptoms are very common.Check out the website, www.EndometriosisAssn.org and the book, Endometriosis: The Complete Reference for Taking Charge of Your Health, by Mary Lou Ballweg.Good luck!
It could, because if you were defecating all the time, it could be pretty embarrassing, in fact; an accident would make it even more embarrassing, and therefore cause depression. It may even cause you to develop agoraphobia or social anxiety associated with your problem of going all the time. IBS has a high correlation with depression. However it is kind of a which came first thing. The intestines have a lot of nerves that are regulated by the same neurotransmitters that have to do with depression. IBS also seems to go along with stress in many people. Both a psychiatrist and gastroenterologist would be helpful with the treatment of IBS and depression. This is a treatable illness.
If the woman is 65, she has had endometriosis for decades. At 65, she would be post menopausal. Endometriosis symptoms flare up with normal monthly cycles in women. If she no longer has normal cycles - and at 65 she shouldn't - why do anything at all? The time to treat endometriosis has passed by that age.
Endometriosis is noncommunicable disease.
Mirena can reduce the symptoms of endometriosis