English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I am one of the unfortunate many of us woman who suffer from terrible period pains.

But for the last year or so i have noticed them getting worse and worse.

I do suffer from PCOS, but its not that causing the pain, the pains are all around my abdomen and lower bowel areas and its getting very painfull to to go to toilet, especially to pass solids, (sorry for that)

Does anyone else suffer from this?
i have also been told that this is a symptom of Endometriosis,
can anyone with Endo, confim they get this too.

Many thanks

2006-10-04 12:06:41 · 13 answers · asked by Shelley27 2 in Health Women's Health

13 answers

I have been dealing with endometriosis and those symptoms for the last five years. I had an partial hysternomy and six months of Lupron treatment five years ago. Yes, it sounds like you have endometriosis. Make an appointment and talk to your doctor about situation. My doctor put me on some birth pills to help get rid of endometriosis. I watch the foods that I eat. I avoid caffeine, chocolates, etc. I mostly drink plenty of water and juices. Yes, those bowel movement are very painful. I start eating more foods with fiber and taking fiber tablets. Trying eating Fiber one cereal. When I would get some pains in abdomen and my side. I would take two Advil and lay down for about hour and a half until the pain went away. Now, I am that I eating healthy foods and exercises, and taking vitamins. I don't have those pains anyone.

Here are some websites that people had post for me:
www.endometriosis.org
http://www.terrakenherbals.com/carolcorner.htm

www.centurywellness.com
www.universalsupplements.com
www.novanaturaltherapies.com
www.healpain.net
www.pristineherbaltouch.com


http://www.endocenter.org
http://www.centerforendo.com
http://www.endometriosistreatment.org...
http://www.nuff.org
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/erc...
http://www.fibroids.net/
http://www.4woman.gov/faq/fibroids.htm...

2006-10-04 12:24:08 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Hi, I suffer from Endo, so I can confirm the painful bowel movements during your period, thing. It is definitely one of the symptoms of Endometriosis.

Other symptoms are lower back pain during your periods, pain while having sex, and painful cramps. My doctor recommends taking a stool softener the day you begin your period, and also aleve, ibuprofen, or Advil as a pain reliever. You should take one tablet the night before you begin, so that the pain will be dulled by the time you start your period.

Going to an OB-GYN could be a good option, but with endo, you can't tell that you have it for sure, unless you have a laposcopic surgery. I had one, but it did not relieve the pain one bit.

Good luck, and I hope that you can learn how to deal with the pain, or find a way to take care of it. Sometimes, it's just no fun being a girl!! :)

2006-10-04 12:15:40 · answer #2 · answered by msmit106 2 · 1 0

I suffered with endometriosis for years and this sounds like some of the pains I had. They kept getting worse, so I had a complete hysterectomy. I did not want anymore kids, so that is why I made this choice, it has helped a lot. I hope you are feeling better, I know exactly what you are going thru.

2006-10-04 12:14:50 · answer #3 · answered by cfoxwell99 5 · 0 0

I used to have severe endometriosis and PCOS. yes it can cause severe cramps even when your not on your menstrual cycle. the only way to diagnose endo is to have a surgery called a laparoscopy where they take little scopes and look inside your belly. by listening to your symptoms, i would be willing to bet that you have it. you need a consultation with a gynecologist ASAP to discuss your options. hope i have helped. I also used to get severe pain having to have a bowel movement and urinate, it will also make intecourse painful too. please get seen by a doctor. unfortunately mine was so severe that i had to have a hysterectomy at the age of 24 but the pain is gone now, thank god.

2006-10-04 12:14:30 · answer #4 · answered by Boop 7 · 0 0

HI , im 44 now but from the age of 13 i had those pains your getting , as time went by tablets where not relieving the pain , i had seen numerous consultants and was getting nowhere , so when i was in my twenties i went to jesspos hospital in sheffield s yorkshire who diagnosed me before operating , i had extensive endometriosis , and was finding it difficult to become pregnant , i had the op , had my kids , im a grandmother too now , but im still getting the pains but not as bad as before the op ,you should see the dr to refer you to hospital , if a woman can get pregnant and it hasnt made her infertile , while your pregnant you stop having periods wich starts to heal the endo, also they could put tou on danazol wich is testerone to stop your periods to heal it , i suppose it depends on the severity , in the meantime feminax tablets should help , if they dont its probably because of the condition been more severe , have yourselve checked out you have nothing to loose and its not a cancer .

2006-10-04 12:59:33 · answer #5 · answered by sheryl 2 · 0 0

Endometriosis and Natural Progesterone
While the cause of endometriosis is unknown we do know that it is an estrogen driven disease. And the body's natural anti-estrogen is progesterone.

Controlling the Symptoms of Endometriosis with Progesterone
We know that when a woman falls pregnant, often endometriosis will disappear, only to return again after pregnancy. There is some very strong correlation between the two. This suggests that the sex hormones are involved and that high progesterone levels produced in pregnancy play an important part in controlling this disease.

That's why progesterone is recommended from days 8 to 26 (just before menstruation) or whenever your normal menstrual cycle ends, breaking from cream briefly to refresh receptor sites. This mimics a pseudo-pregnancy state, and facilitates healing.

Higher than normal doses are required which appear to be well tolerated. Levels around about 60~80mg/day are usually required for pain management. You know you are taking too high a dose if you begin to feel sleepy after applying cream.

Most women will find that they can reduce their dosage of progesterone after 7-12 months, however, attempts to go below 40mg/day progesterone often allows symptoms to creep back in.

Keep in mind that a delayed diagnosis of endometriosis after numerous years of medication and synthetic hormone cocktails often leads to liver dysfunction, adrenal exhaustion, and chronic pain / fatigue which can compromise the uptake of progesterone.

No one is suggesting progesterone cures endometriosis but we certainly know, based on empirical evidence, that it appears to play a major role in controlling its distressing symptoms. We know that women who stopped progesterone felt great for a few months and then suddenly, after progesterone stores had washed from the body, the disease would flare back up.

Most women with endometriosis remain on progesterone cream for maintenance and pain control, and adjust their dose when necessary, increasing when indicated such as in times of stress.

Catherine Rollins

Need more info?
E-mail me!
Blessings~
Michelle Jones

2006-10-04 13:05:14 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Your symtoms sound exactly the same as mine did.
I suffered really bad with endo, passed out in middle of road at one point, decided enough was enough, got fed up with trying all sorts of drugs that didn't really help In the end i decided that a hysterectomy was the best thing for me (I was only 33 at the time, so did have bit of a struggle persuading my doctor that this was what i wanted, i was prepared to pay to have it done privately if my doctor wouldn't agree), didn't want any more kids, best thing i ever did. I felt so relieved when came out of hospital, got over op very quickly.
I really hope you find the right solution for yourself.

2006-10-04 21:27:40 · answer #7 · answered by crofty 3 · 0 0

hi, some months in the past i had an identical situation. i began out feeling very drained and ill and that i could have undesirable abdomen pains that felt like the worst era pains you need to think of. i had additionally no longer had my era for a at an identical time as by potential of then. it went on for a at an identical time as and that i develop into attempting to convince myself that i had eaten some thing that didnt consider me, or it develop into rigidity or i had strained myself and it could get extra effective. whether it didnt. i went to the medical doctors and over approximately 2 months they did try after try to got here back to me asserting i had Crohn's ailment and now i'm on medical care and ultimately the pains have stopped. :) sorry for the long answer, i've got faith like it doesnt truly furnish plenty perception yet while issues like that start to take place then head to physician, and that i reckon its worth it in case you may understand it because of the fact i could'nt desire every person to pass by using what i went by using. so if the era doesnt come or the discomfort persists. please see a doctor. desire this helped :)

2016-10-01 22:49:43 · answer #8 · answered by regula 4 · 0 0

Uterine fibroids are usually not dangerous, but can cause immense discomfort and lead to complications like anemia from heavy blood loss. In rare cases, they may cause complications that affect pregnancy.

In cases where there are no symptoms, treatment may not be necessary. However, proper diagnosis and treatment may be required if your symptoms are severe or causing complications. Along with conventional treatment, you can try some natural home remedies. Read here https://tr.im/Hyksj

2016-05-17 03:40:57 · answer #9 · answered by ? 2 · 0 0

Please go to the doctor, I have had endo although I was obviously older than you 43 and had to have a hysterectomy. That was a while ago so please don't worry. They probably will give you a scrap which will make you feel fine

2006-10-04 12:13:13 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers