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5 answers

My sister has Endometriosis. It wouldn't be that. I would suggest you see your gyn just for suggestions. It may be the position you are in or the size of you and your partner? I am pretty certain it wouldn't be Endometriosis.

Here is a website on Endometriosis: Most women who have endometriosis do not have symptoms. Of those who do experience symptoms, the common symptoms are pain (usually pelvic) and infertility. Pelvic pain usually occurs during or just before menstruation and lessens after menstruation. Some women experience pain or cramping with intercourse, bowel movements and/or urination. Even pelvic examination by a doctor can be painful. The pain intensity can change from month to month, and vary greatly among women. Some women experience progressive worsening of symptoms, while others can have resolution of pain without treatment.

Pelvic pain in women with infertility depends partly on where the implants of endometriosis are located. Deeper implants and implants in areas with many pain-sensing nerves may be more likely to produce pain. The implants may produce substances that circulate in the bloodstream and cause pain. Lastly, pain can result when endometriosis implants form scars.

I still would suggest you see your Gynecologist to make sure you have no unseen problems.

2006-10-21 06:21:52 · answer #1 · answered by Stephanie F 7 · 0 0

Are you definite it isn't mental? My first inspiration used to be that your comment approximately the affliction seeming to be "in particular approximately zero-a million inches within her" makes it sound as though it possibly her hymen. I'm no longer definite how routinely you've gotten honestly had intercourse, however it seems that a few ladies' hymens may also be rattling close indestructible. But it is puzzling, considering that possibly her hymen's already been damaged. Often it takes a few occasions having intercourse for the hymen to quit inflicting affliction. My query could be, how a long way aside had been those "two or three instances?" The best factor I can believe of (and I'm no surgeon) is that perhaps her hymen is form of ultimate up among sexual movements. If that is the concern, a surgeon would support.

2016-09-01 00:26:11 · answer #2 · answered by pointdexter 4 · 0 0

Simply because someone "knows someone who has Endo and they don't have that symptom" does NOT mean it's not Endo. The pain you cite is actually fairly common in women with the disease who have cervical, rectovaginal, cul de sac and lower GI tract implants and involvement. For accurate information on the disease and effective treatment, visit www.centerforendo.com. While there is no definitive cure, it is possible to obtain proper help from specialists in the disease. Also recommend joining (free) http://groups.yahoo.com/group/erc and http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/EndoDocs for more info and support from those who live with the disease every day and can point you in the best direction for additional resources and info. Be sure to also see www.endocenter.org for more materials. Good luck and hang in there, you are not alone.

PS - the MedicineNet.com site referenced above is a superficial resource at best. Author Leon J. Baginski, MD, FACOG is NOT a specialist in the disease and has no evident academic publications on it. He cites erroneous, outdated information which is better suited to old wive's tales than as a presentation on the disease. Case in point: "Medroxyprogesterone acetate (Danazol)" is suggested as a treatment by the author. One need not have a medical degree to know that MPA is, in fact, NOT Danazol, but rather, Provera. It is not recommended to take advice from articles that can't accurately tell the difference between common medications, let alone speculate whether Endo causes pain in the estimated *10 million* (not 1 million) women and girls in the U.S. alone living with the disease.

2006-10-21 11:47:47 · answer #3 · answered by Endo 6 · 0 1

Not endometriosis!

2006-10-21 07:11:21 · answer #4 · answered by me. 4 · 1 0

maybe, but it could also be that your vagina is elapsed into your rectum and when u have sex it pushes it into your rectum even more, i would go to a gyno and have a pelvic exam to be sure, could also be a cyst behind your vagina and when u have sex it gets irritated

2006-10-21 06:56:06 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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