The web is a wonderful thing. I've learned a few basic things in the last half hour or so:
1) Endometrial ablation, the removal of the uterine lining to reduce or eliminate menstrual bleeding, sounded great at first but is not what I need. It has no effect on menstrual pain. (It also isn't a surefire contraceptive, which is a scary thought. Conception with little or no uterine lining to nourish the embryo? Lovely. But not my problem, so I didn't follow that trail.)
2) Hysterectomy is a Big Fat Hairy Deal. We're talking a hospital stay here, even (if I understand correctly) if the whole thing's pulled out through the vaginal canal. We're talking probable early menopause (hot flashes, insomnia, bone brittleness, sexual unpleasantness, etc etc and hormone replacement therapy), even if the ovaries remain. We're talking increased (some studies say up to 4x) risk of heart attacks for the rest of my life, even if the ovaries remain.
There is no justice. Why couldn't I have been human? Why? Why?
3) There's a thing called a "myomectomy" which was obviously less drastic than hysterectomy. Looked into it. No dice: this is the removal of fibroid tumors. Unless I have a fibroid tumor this procedure will not help much. ;-) Got to see some really impressive pictures though.
4) I think I'd hope to qualify for a type called "subtotal hysterectomy" where the cervix is left behind. Apparently, this "may help with later sexual enjoyment" (NY State Dept of Health). However, I'd still need regular Pap smears and would thus remain a slave to some @#$! doctor. This surgery must be done through an abdominal incision (duh). Most patients are "up and walking" by "the second or third day".
5) Hysterectomy is way popular. According to the CDC, one in four women will have one. Given my experience of having a uterus, I'm only surprised the number isn't higher.
6) I like the name HysterSisters. (Dave Barry Voice: HysterSister and the Fallopian Tubes would be a great name for a rock band.)
1) Endometrial ablation, the removal of the uterine lining to reduce or eliminate menstrual bleeding, sounded great at first but is not what I need. It has no effect on menstrual pain. (It also isn't a surefire contraceptive, which is a scary thought. Conception with little or no uterine lining to nourish the embryo? Lovely. But not my problem, so I didn't follow that trail.)
2) Hysterectomy is a Big Fat Hairy Deal. We're talking a hospital stay here, even (if I understand correctly) if the whole thing's pulled out through the vaginal canal. We're talking probable early menopause (hot flashes, insomnia, bone brittleness, sexual unpleasantness, etc etc and hormone replacement therapy), even if the ovaries remain. We're talking increased (some studies say up to 4x) risk of heart attacks for the rest of my life, even if the ovaries remain.
There is no justice. Why couldn't I have been human? Why? Why?
3) There's a thing called a "myomectomy" which was obviously less drastic than hysterectomy. Looked into it. No dice: this is the removal of fibroid tumors. Unless I have a fibroid tumor this procedure will not help much. ;-) Got to see some really impressive pictures though.
4) I think I'd hope to qualify for a type called "subtotal hysterectomy" where the cervix is left behind. Apparently, this "may help with later sexual enjoyment" (NY State Dept of Health). However, I'd still need regular Pap smears and would thus remain a slave to some @#$! doctor. This surgery must be done through an abdominal incision (duh). Most patients are "up and walking" by "the second or third day".
5) Hysterectomy is way popular. According to the CDC, one in four women will have one. Given my experience of having a uterus, I'm only surprised the number isn't higher.
6) I like the name HysterSisters. (Dave Barry Voice: HysterSister and the Fallopian Tubes would be a great name for a rock band.)
no subject
That's cool that your mom believed you. Mine never did, so in some sense, I was perfectly prepared for doctors to dismiss my pain -- my own mother just kept telling me to shut up or she'd give me something to whine about. Well, at least I'm pursuing the question now.
During that laparoscopy, did you get the endo cleaned up (as much as they could) right then, during the same procedure? How long was it before your symptoms were bad enough again that you had to go back?
no subject
Yeah, during the lapro they also cleaned up the endo the best they could. It lasted about a year before the pain levels were pretty damned bad again. But that's in large part due to the fact that I refused to take the hormone pills I was supposed to to supress their growth -- the hormones just did NOT agree with me. I took them for a month and then just stopped. In retrospect, I might have tried asking my doc to try something different, but actually, the depression, etc. I experienced on these pills was similar to the reaction I'd had on other types of birth control pills, so I wasn't very hopefull -- and my doctor wasn't very willing to consider alternatives anyway.
Do you think your pains might be endo-related?
no subject
Hrm, a year... hrm... What hormone pills did your doc give you? Something like bc pills, or something weirder, like Lupron? My doc has mentioned Lupron and I'm not too keen on the idea. After that year, was that when you went in for your hysterectomy?
Yeah, my pains might be endo. Manual exam gives no evidence of scarring or adhesions, usually associated with endo pain this bad, but really we won't know until he goes in and looks. I had thought my doc had ruled out endo on the basis of my regular exams, but apparently not. Fair enough. Of course, one thing I'm secretly in-the-back-of-my-head worried about is what if it's NOT endo? But I'm trying to push that worry away. I am allowed to worry about that next Friday. :-)
no subject
My endo didn't show any external signs at all (which is why I kept getting dismissed as just being a wimp about cramps); the manual exams turned up nothing.
What DID I take? No, I don't think I did the Lupron, that scared me. I think I took a strange form of birth-control pills. One of these new ones where you don't take sugar pills once a month, you just keep on with the same medicine -- it was at such a low level that I would bleed anyway. And they still messed me up. What can I say, I'm just super-sensitive to hormones. If you have endo, and can take birth-control pills, the laser treatment and then BC pills afterwards should ward off the problem for years. I mean, you'll still HAVE endo, but hell, *I* still have endo and I don't have a uterus! But it won't hurt anymore. The goal is to get rid of the pain *totally* -- and yes, it IS possible.
Good luck to you, I'm thinking about you and that up-coming lapro!