Surgery
Although surgery does not cure
endometriosis, it does offer short-term results for
most women and long-term relief for a few.
Surgery is
generally recommended for endometriosis when:
- Treatment with hormone therapy has not
controlled symptoms, and symptoms interfere with daily
living.
- Endometrial implants or scar tissue (adhesions) interferes with the functions of other
abdominal organs.
- Endometriosis causes infertility.
Surgery Choices
- Laparoscopy is
the most common procedure used to
diagnose and treat endometriosis. If your doctor
recommends a laparoscopy, it will be used to look for and possibly to remove or
destroy implants and scar tissue. During the same procedure, the doctor can:
- Examine the
internal organs for signs of endometriosis and other possible problems. This is
the only way that endometriosis can be diagnosed with certainty. But a "no
endometriosis" diagnosis is never certain. Growths (implants) can be tiny or
hidden from the surgeon's view.
- Remove any
visible endometriosis implants and scar tissue that may be causing pain or
infertility. A surgeon uses one or more techniques, including cutting and
removing the growths (excision) or destroying them with a laser beam or an
electric current (electrocautery). If the doctor finds an endometriosis cyst on
an ovary (endometrioma), he or she will likely remove the cyst.
- Hysterectomy with oophorectomy offers
the chance of long-term pain relief for women who have no future childbearing
plans. But hysterectomy with oophorectomy is a major surgery that has risks of
complications from the surgery and anesthesia. After having your ovaries
removed, low-estrogen side effects can be more sudden and severe than
low-estrogen symptoms at natural
menopause. And, when you start menopause early, your
risk of future
osteoporosis increases unless you take measures to
protect your bones. Talk to your doctor about whether
estrogen replacement therapy or nonhormone treatment
(bisphosphonates) might be best for you.
Should I have a hysterectomy with oophorectomy to treat endometriosis?
Should I use estrogen replacement therapy after having a hysterectomy or oophorectomy?
What To Think About
Women who do not become
pregnant after surgery can consider trying
fertility drugs with
insemination or
in vitro fertilization. For more information, see the
topic
Fertility Problems.
Some studies suggest
that using hormone therapy after surgery can make the pain-free period longer
by preventing the growth of new or returning endometriosis.5
When laparoscopy may not be needed
Surgery is
the only way to be sure that you have endometriosis. Usually, this can be done
with a tiny viewing instrument that is inserted through a small incision (laparoscopy). But laparoscopy is not always needed.
Doctors commonly try anti-inflammatory and/or hormone treatment for suspected
endometriosis. If this works, endometriosis is a more likely diagnosis.
Endometriosis symptoms will stop naturally after you
reach menopause. If you are nearing age 50, controlling symptoms with home
treatment and hormone therapy until you reach menopause may be a more
reasonable choice for you than surgery. But if scar tissue is causing pain,
hormone therapy will not be effective.