endometriosis and Interstitial cystitis (endometriosis cystitis endometritis isolation antibiotic)
I second the notion you should find a really good infectious disease doctor.
Endometriosis is believed by some to be caused by an infection, such as
chlamydia, which is difficult to test. Some doctors would just have you take
doxycycline for a long period (many months, even a year) because it's a very
very safe antibiotic (it doesn't kill anything -- it stops things from
replicating and gives your body a chance to take care of them).
I'm not sure how to find a doctor willing to search harder for infection,
including things like mycoplasma and ureaplasma. In men the test that reveals
that stuff is called "PCR" and it takes weeks. I'm not sure what the
equivalent is for you. Some doctors would try a few months of doxycycline to
see the result even without proof of infection.
http://www.questdiagnostics.com/kbase/topic/detail/drug/hw43173/detail.htm
and here's a better one
http://www.emedicine.com/med/topic1774.htm
And look at the study below (or show it to a NEW doctor).
The good news is there might be a chance that antibiotics could help you.
G'luck! Keep searching for a cure!!
- Carlos
====================
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_
uids=3668966&dopt=Abstract
Subacute focal endometritis. Association with cervical colonization with
ureaplasma urealyti***, pelvic pathology and endometrial maturation.
Fahmy NW, Honore LH, ***ming DC.
Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University of Alberta, Edmonton,
Canada.
Subacute focal endometritis (SFE) has been associated with cervical Ureaplasma
urealyti*** colonization and is considered a significant indicator of pelvic
adhesions or endometriosis. A retrospective ****ysis was performed comparing
cervical isolation rates, endometrial maturation patterns and laparoscopic
findings in 64 patients with SFE and in a control group of 70 unselected
patients with no histologic evidence of SFE at endometrial biopsy. The data
suggest that although the prevalence of pelvic damage of various types is high,
SFE cannot be used as a reliable marker for pelvic adhesions or endometriosis;
that SFE does not interfere with normal endometrial maturation; and that SFE is
not invariably associated with cervical U urealyti*** but may represent
resolving infection. It is also possible that SFE represents endometrial
autoimmunity either following mycoplasma infection or arising spontaneously.
PMID: 3668966 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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