Endometriosis

Most women have heard of endometriosis and many have at least a general concept of what it is. In my practice, I remember many women calling it “the working women’s disease.” That’s because there was a theory a couple of decades ago that endometriosis was related to a high stress lifestyle.

What is Endometriosis?

Stress may have a role in endometriosis but let’s go back to the basics first. Endometriosis, in the simplest possible terms, is tissue from the uterine lining growing where it shouldn’t. During healthy menstruation, women shed their endometrial lining, or the endometrium, each month. The material is expelled from the body as part of the monthly menstruation. While many women would probably like to bypass this inconvenient and sometimes painful monthly routine, it is the key to life itself.

However, in the 5.5 million North American women with endometriosis, cells from the uterine lining have migrated from where they’re supposed to be – inside the uterus – to other parts of the body, most often within the pelvic area, on the bowel, bladder, ovaries and the outside of the uterus. It’s sometimes called retrograde menstruation. Rogue endometrial tissue has been known to migrate as far as scar tissue on the arms and legs.

This misplaced tissue develops into growths that respond to the menstrual cycle in the same way the lining of the uterus does. Triggered by hormonal signals, the tissue builds up and sheds each month. While menstrual blood flows out of the body through the cervix and vagina, endometriosis tissue and the cells it sheds have no way of leaving the body. Trapped between layers of tissue, they cause inflammation, scar tissue, adhesions and bowel problems. Endometriosis can lead to intense pain and reproductive difficulties.

More than 5 million North American women suffer from symptoms of endometriosis that include:

  • Pain before and during periods
  • Pain during intercourse
  • Chronic pelvic pain
  • Cramping at any time of the cycle
  • Painful bowel movements
  • Fatigue
  • Painful urination
  • Infertility
  • Gastrointestinal upset such as
    diarrhea, constipation and nausea

The Essential Estrogen Balance

While the cause of endometriosis is unknown and there is no cure, it can be relatively simple to treat and control the symptoms. The standard medical treatment involves taking synthetic hormones, such as the birth control pill, that stop menstruation and therefore stop the buildup of blood and endometrial tissue outside the uterus. But there are new ways of approaching endometriosis that are much kinder to the body and address an underlying problem that certainly relates to the condition.

Current scientific theory points to estrogen dominance as a major factor in endometriosis. Bringing progesterone and estrogen into natural balance will frequently result in symptom relief and, in some cases, even shrink rogue endometrial tissue. Quite simply, this usually means using a prescription natural progesterone cream – called bioidentical progesterone – from a compounding pharmacy. (You can find a compounding pharmacy near you by contacting the International Academy of Compounding Pharmacists at www.iacprx.org.)

Testing Your Estrogen Levels

Along with progesterone cream has come a new method of hormone testing that better captures the fat-soluble hormones than blood tests. Highly accurate saliva testing can give a women and her doctor a much better picture of her estrogen and progesterone levels compared to relatively antiquated and unreliable blood hormone tests. As a general benchmark, a range of 30 to 50 mg of bioidentical progesterone cream from days 8-26 of the menstrual cycle are usually sufficient.

Medical supervision is necessary to individualize treatment. Doctors who use bio-identical hormones do not subscribe to the one-size-fits-all pharmaceutical method of drug prescribing. I said earlier that stress might play a role in endometriosis, even though it almost certainly isn’t the cause of the disease. What we now know about hormones is that when women have a great deal of stress, their production of the stress hormone cortisol and estrogen increases dramatically!

The Effects of Estrogen Overload

Normal estrogen levels may cause some breast swelling or nipple tenderness in the few days before the onset of your period. It’s often the way you know it’s coming. However, when you have an overproduction of estrogen, often called estrogen dominance, those estrogen symptoms are magnified. In addition to stress-triggered estrogen production, we are seeing women with out-of-whack hormones related to environmental estrogens, known as xenoestrogens. We have seen xenoestrogens wreak havoc in wildlife and fish affecting sexual development and fertility.

It’s only in the past decade that we turned the magnifying glass on ourselves and found sperm abnormalities and serious female fertility issues created by xenoestrogens. Xenoestrogens most often enter the body through the food supply such as meat and dairy products from “hormonally-enhanced” animals. That’s why recent Italian research showed that women with the highest consumption of meat and dairy products increased their risk of endometriosis by 80 to 100 percent, while those who ate a diet rich in green vegetables and fresh fruit reduced their risk by 40 percent.

Get Your Estrogen Back on Track Naturally

As a naturopathic doctor as well as a medical doctor, I advise diet, exercise and detox before accepting a prescription for bioidentical progesterone. Sometimes, clearing up lifelong constipation is all that’s needed to turn the tables on endometriosis.

I recommend a detoxification program for women with endometriosis that includes:

  • A high fiber diet
  • Onions and garlic to help chelate toxins from the body
  • Exercise
  • Sauna therapy
  • Epsom salt baths and hydrotherapy
  • Liver support with milk thistle (up to 240 mg. daily, in divided doses) and other safe herbs in liver support formulas
  • Eliminating elements of stress that can cause adrenal fatigue and toxic stress levels

Endometriosis also often responds to treatment with other supplements, including:

  • Black cohosh (40 to 80 mg. daily) to help relieve painful menstruation
  • Calcium and magnesium (up to 1,500 mg. of calcium and up to 900 mg of magnesium in divided doses) to help the liver more efficiently metabolize hormones
  • Iron (up to 60 mg. daily in divided doses, if necessary) to help relieve iron deficiency that may result from excessive bleeding. (Use a brand that chelated and/or combined with iron-rich herbs)
  • Endometriosis is one of those diseases that has many “hitchhikers,” or other conditions that often accompany it.

The Endometriosis Association says it is now becoming apparent that women with endometriosis are more apt to be troubled by:

  • Chemical sensitivities
  • Chronic fatigue syndrome
  • Asthma and eczema
  • Infections
  • Food intolerances
  • Mononucleosis
  • Mitral valve prolapse
  • Fibromyalgia
  • Autoimmune disorders,
    including lupus and Hashimoto’s thyroiditis

Interestingly, many of these accompanying conditions are associated with candida yeast overgrowth, an area of particular interest to me. The Endometriosis Association agrees that many women with endometriosis also suffer from allergies, chemical sensitivities, and frequent yeast infections. Many yeast experts, including the late Dr. William Crook, author of “The Yeast Connection” and “The Yeast Connection and Women’s Health”, believed there was a strong connection between the two conditions.

In fact, Dr. Crook and many practitioners, including me, have achieved excellent and lasting results by treating endometriosis and yeast overgrowth simultaneously with a yeast-free diet, natural antifungals like caprylic acid, olive leaf extract and probiotics. Yeast overgrowth may not be the main cause of endometriosis but it’s one of those hitchhikers that you want to avoid if possible.

Carolyn Dean, MD, ND, is health advisor to Woman’s Health Connection at http://www.yeastconnection.com/ and is featured on the website’s “Ask A Pro” page. Her latest books are”

Author: Dr. Carolyn Dean, MD, ND