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Endometriosis may up risk of complications in pregnancy

According to a recent study, pregnant women with endometriosis - a chronic gynecologic disease - are at greater risk for a host of complications during pregnancy and at delivery.

Updated on: Sep 14, 2017, 17:32:12 IST
Indo Asian News Service | By , New York
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Pregnant women with endometriosis - a chronic gynecologic disease - are at greater risk for a host of complications during pregnancy and at delivery, including preterm birth and caesarean section, a study has showed.

The study showed that women with endometriosis had higher risks of miscarriage, preterm birth and placenta previa. (Shutterstock)
The study showed that women with endometriosis had higher risks of miscarriage, preterm birth and placenta previa. (Shutterstock)

The study showed that women with endometriosis had higher risks of miscarriage, preterm birth and placenta previa. The condition was associated with birth of infants who were small for their gestational age. There was no association, however, between endometriosis and gestational hypertension or preeclampsia. Such pregnancies should be closely monitored by obstetricians for these complications, the researchers stressed.

“Endometriosis is known to alter a woman’s physiology in a way that could interfere with a number of stages of pregnancy,” said Vincenzo Berghella, Professor at Thomas Jefferson University in Pennsylvania.

“From causing inflammation at the endometrium, to resisting the action of progesterone during implantation and throughout the pregnancy, there are a number of ways that endometriosis may affect the normal course of pregnancy,” Berghella added. Endometriosis - a disorder in which tissue that normally lines the uterus grows outside the uterus - affects 10 % of women worldwide.

It is often diagnosed in the early reproductive years and is associated with endometrial tissue that travels and lodges in other parts of the body. Some of the symptoms include dagger-like abdominal pain, infertility and painful intercourse. For the research, published in the journal Fertility and Sterility, the team analysed 24 studies comprising over a million women.

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