can interfere with the functioning of the ovaries and fallopian tubes and are among the common causes of female infertility. Adhesions on the ovaries or fallopian tubes can prevent pregnancy by trapping the released egg
relatively common in women and the majority of women undergoing gynecological surgery develop postoperative adhesions. Sometimes these pelvic adhesions cause chronic pelvic pain and/or infertility
abdominal adhesions intestinal adhesions intraperitoneal adhesions pelvic adhesions intrauterine adhesions or Asherman's syndrome.
Abdominal or pelvic adhesions can be diagnosed through imaging tests like ultrasound, MRI, or CT scans. Laparoscopy, a minimally invasive surgical procedure, can also be used to directly visualize and diagnose adhesions in the abdomen or pelvis. Symptoms such as chronic abdominal pain, bloating, or changes in bowel patterns may prompt further investigation for adhesions.
No, a pap smear can't detect blocked fallopian tubes.
Pelvic adhesions may increase bleeding. If you are saturating more than one pad in 4 hours, you will want to contact your physician. If you are saturating more than one pad in 1 hour, you will want to go into the urgent care or ER to get looked at so you don't decrease your hemoglobin too low and cause other problems related to anemia.
Anytime you have a surgery you run the risk of forming new adhesions. Sometimes, however, you don't have the choice of not having lysis of adhesions either due to colon blockage or pain. They now have a few different types of barriers that they can use to help you from forming adhesions, but they are not 100%, you still run that risk. Also in answer to your back pain, the answer could be yes. I don't know your medical background so I don't know that all of your pain is due to adhesions but I do know that adhesions can cause back pain. Adhesion pain is not always at the site of the adhesion. When organs, muscles, and all our insides are being pulled too tight or shifted in a way not normal it will cause pain.
yes i think hehehe
Adhesions are simply scar tissue that forms between abdominal tissues and organs. Most adhesions cause no symptoms, but some can cause abdominal pain, and are a major cause of female infertility and intestinal obstruction. These adhesions need to be surgically repaired.
A tipped uterus; endometriosis; adenomyosis; fibroids; pelvic inflammatory disease; an IUD; a uterine, ovarian, bowel or bladder tumor; uterine polyps; inflammatory bowel disease; scarring or adhesions from earlier surgery; menorrhagia.
Adhesions are fibrous bands that form between tissues and organs, often as a result of surgery or inflammation. When adhesions restrict movement in the intestines, it can lead to a condition called intestinal adhesions, which can cause abdominal pain and obstruct the flow of food and waste.
pelvic immflamatory disease or pregnant
kidney stone, pulled adhesions, infection