View clinical trials related to Endometriosis.
Filter by:Endometriosis is observed in one out of every ten women in society, causing endometrial cells to be found outside their normal location in the body and proliferate in other locations, leading to fibrosis in the tissue due to the secretion of various factors from the cells. Additionally, the substances secreted by the cells can cause various other changes in the tissue besides fibrosis. Increased neurogenesis and neovascularization are among the primary changes, which occur as a result of the secretion of substances from the cells. Increased neovascularization, neurogenesis, and fibrosis in the tissue lead to the formation of nodular structures in the pelvic region, resulting in pain development in women. Nodular formations in the pelvic region due to endometriosis are especially observed in the rectovaginal space. Despite being small in size, they can induce increased neovascularization and neurogenesis even in healthy peritoneal tissue due to the microenvironment they create, leading to different clinical symptoms clinically. However, it is not known how far these changes occur around the endometriotic nodule in the presence of endometriosis. In this project, in patients operated on due to endometriosis, the density of nerve and vascular structures in the surgical margins of the peritoneal tissue excised along with the nodule, and the synthesis and release of chemical mediators causing pain (e.g., Bradykinin, Substance-P) are evaluated. The aim is to determine the minimum surgical margin where excision should be applied in surgery and to demonstrate any endometriotic changes that may exist in the tissues, even though they may appear macroscopically healthy.
Endometriosis (EM) is a common gynecological condition, but the pathogenesis of it has not yet been clarified. Here, the investigators wanted to investigate the correlation between endometriosis and the intra-tissue microbiota. The investigators planed to collect serum, vaginal swabs, cervical mucus, feces, peritoneal fluid, and endometrial tissue for sequencing and experiments.
This retrospective study aims to compare the surgical and pregnancy outcomes of disc and segmental resection for rectal DIE through a single-center retrospective analysis, to summarize clinical experience, and to explore the possible factor of the differences. The results would provide preliminary clinical basis for the treatment and selection of surgical methods for patients with rectal DIE, and also provide a research basis for the prospective clinical studies.
In this prospective case control study a total of 66 women (33 women with endometriosis) and (33 healthy women) will be recruited. The main objective of the study is to investigate the proteomic profile of menstrual blood in women with endometriosis compared to controls. Additionally, differentially expressed proteins will be investigated across different stages, clinical presentations, and subtypes of endometriosis
This is a randomized clinical trial that will be carried out in women with endometriosis divided into two groups: the experimental group (EG) that will receive therapeutic-educational physiotherapy, which will combine therapeutic exercise with a pain education program, and the control group (CG) who will receive the pain education program. The participants will be evaluated at three moments: before starting the study (T1), after the 8-week treatment program (T2) and after another 8 weeks of follow-up in which they will be encouraged to continue with the treatment (T3). The initial assessment will include a medical and physiotherapy history, and at T1, T2 and T3 the following will be assessed: pain, abdominopelvic mobility, muscle status, functionality, sexual function, quality of life, stress and biomarkers of chronic inflammation.
Our study aims to assess the prevalence of adenomyosis and endometriosis in patients consulting for elective fertility preservation through the diagnosis of these pathologies by transvaginal pelvic ultrasound. Imaging data will be compared with clinical data (patient characteristics, clinical symptoms) as well as the assessment of anxiety, depression, and quality of life collected from the women.
The purpose of the study is to assess the effect of a digital mindfulness- and acceptance-based psychological intervention on quality of life, work ability, pain experience and physical and mental health in participants experiencing chronic pain, fatigue and/or reduced quality of life due to endometriosis.
- Objective: To determine if the tele-rehabilitation program for chronic pelvic pain associated with endometriosis composed of pain education, therapeutic exercise and respiratory control decreases pain according to the Visual Numerical Scale (EVN), catastrophizing with the Pain Catastrophizing Scale (PCS), kinesiophobia with the Tampa Scale of Kinesiophobia (TSK), improves sexual function according to the Female Sexual Function Index (FSFI) and QoL compared to the Control Group with the Health Status Questionnaire (SF-12). - Follow-up: four evaluated questionnaires: preintervention; postintervention, 3 months postintervention, 6 months postintervention - Participants: 66 women diagnosed with endometriosis with chronic pelvic pain in different Spanish endometriosis associations. - Randomization: women will be randomly assigned to two groups using the EpiData 3.1 software - Interventions: Experimental Group: therapeutic exercise + conscious breathing (16 sessions) and pain education (4 sessions) through the TRAK platform. Control Group: They will receive informative material in weeks 1, 3, 5 and 7 about their pathology and with recommendations for them to achieve healthy lifestyle habits that do not further damage their disease.
The goal of this randomized controlled trial is to investigate the effect of esketamine versus placebo on the NRS score for chronic pelvic pain. Secondary endpoints are to assess pain scores, side-effects, quality of life, depressive symptoms and pain coping.
The primary aim of this study is to investigate the effect of Internet-delivered Acceptance and commitment therapy for endometriosis and chronic pain. A pilot study (no randomization; N=10) will be conducted to test the intervention and assessment procedures. The participants will go through an active internet-based ACT treatment focused on education about endometriosis and chronic pain, value-based exposure for avoided situations, and behavior change through exercises targeting the processes mindfulness, cognitive defusion and acceptance. The treatment is delivered on a safe internet platform. Participants have planned telephone contact with their assigned psychologist 2 times during the program and can also contact their psychologist via a message system in the platform and expect answer within 48 hours.