The endocrine aspects of endometriosis

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Abstract

Endometriosis is a chronic gynecologic disease of reproductive-age women, causing menstrual pain and infertility. Endocrine and inflammatory mechanisms drive its development, with estrogen/progesterone imbalance contributing to extrauterine implantation and persistence of ectopic endometrial cells. Chronic pain also induces stress-related disorders, worsening the quality of life. Infertility results from inflammatory, ovarian, and endometrial changes, and adverse pregnancy outcomes are reported. Diagnosis of endometriosis is clinical and imaging based. Furthermore, gastrointestinal, urinary, or autoimmune comorbidities complicate endometriosis management. Hormonal treatments, including progestins, estro-progestins, gonadotropin-releasing hormone analogs (GnRH-a), or oral antagonists, suppress menstruation and relieve pain. The relevant endocrine aspects and the systemic comorbidities make endometriosis a syndrome that requires a multidisciplinary diagnostic and therapeutic approach.

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Petraglia, F., Vannuccini, S., Dolmans, M. M., Speciale, A. R., Bourdon, M., Marcellin, L., … Chapron, C. (2025, October 1). The endocrine aspects of endometriosis. European Journal of Endocrinology. Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/ejendo/lvaf192

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