Study: endometriosis and fibroids can increase the risk of premature death

An extensive US study indicates that women with a migrant uterine lining, or fibrous tumors in the uterus, may be more likely to have early death. Researchers in the British Medical Journal wrote that the two common cases between women are linked to greater risks, such as high blood pressure, heart disease and some types of cancer, but its effect on the possibility of death before the age of seventy is still unclear. The study detected 110 and 91 women whose age ranged from between 25 and 42 years in 1989, and they had no history of uterine extermination, heart disease, blood vessels or cancer. Among them, approximately 12,000 women suffered from the endometrium, a chronic condition that caused pain due to the growth of tissue similar to the endometrium outside the uterus, while 21 thousand and 600 women suffered from fibrous tumors, which were not shaped cancerous tumors in the uterine wall. 4 thousand and 356 women expanded life before reaching the age of seventy over the next thirty years. In any case, the annual rate of premature death was the deaths of every thousand women with maternal motherfast, and 1.4 out of every thousand women who were not in this state. The high risk of premature death and after calculating risk factors such as age, body mass index, diet, physical activity and smoking, the endometrium is related to the high risk of premature death by 31%, due to a large extent to women’s cancer. Uterine fibroids are associated with the increasing risk of early death due to women’s cancers, but not at a higher mortality rate for any cause. The researchers concluded that “these results emphasize the importance of primary care providers who take these female disorders into account when evaluating women’s health.” The endometrium migratory, the endometrium migratory, is a painful satisfactory condition, in which the tissue that resembles the inner lining of the uterus grows. It often affects the ovaries, the fallopian tubes and the tissue that dominates the pelvis, according to “Mayo Clink”. In rare cases, migratory endometrial attachments can be found outside the area where the pelvic members are located. The tissues of the endometrium are similar to the endometrium, with the endometrium in the uterus, as it becomes thick, fragmented and bleeding with every menstrual cycle, but they grow in places that do not belong to it, and do not leave the body. And if the endometrium reaches the eggs, it can form a bag called the endometrium. The surrounding tissue can become irritated, and it must be detectic tissue. The rods of fibrous tissue can also be formed, called sutures. It can cause pelvic tissue and organs together. The endometrium can cause pulling pain, especially during menstruation. Fertility problems can also occur, but treatments can help tolerate its condition and their complications.