• Pain Res Manag · May 2015

    Assessment of pain and stress intensity among women with ovarian endometriomas versus teratomas.

    • Karolina Stella Chmaj-Wierzchowska, Małgorzata Kampioni, Maciej Wilczak, Stefan Sajdak, and Tomasz Opala.
    • Pain Res Manag. 2015 May 1; 20 (3): 133-6.

    BackgroundIn recent years, numerous studies have considered endometriosis to be a subclinical, local inflammatory process in the pelvic peritoneum, the main symptom of which is pain.ObjectivesTo assess pain intensity and pain-related stress in women with ovarian endometriomas versus teratomas.MethodsIn total, 860 women (18 to 38 years of age) treated laparoscopically for lesions in the adnexa between September 2006 and November 2013 were included in the present study. After an intraoperative review of their histopathological lesions, the patients were divided into two study groups: group E (n=480), with histopathologically confirmed ovarian endometriomas; and group T (n=380), after laparoscopic treatment of ovarian teratomas. A questionnaire was generated for the study and completed by each group. Statistical analysis was performed using the Mann-Whitney U test (P≤0.05).ResultsMedian pain scores for group E versus group T were as follows: pain during menstruation, 6 versus 3 (P=0.001); pain outside of menstruation (in professional life), 2 versus 2 (P=0.014); and pain during sexual intercourse, 3 versus 1 (P=0.006). Pain-related stress scores were higher in group T versus group E (5 versus 3; P=0.007).ConclusionOvarian endometriomas caused more pain than ovarian teratomas, likely due to the endometrial tissue component and not a mass effect. The assessment of pain and pain-related stress associated with the pelvis minor showed a high level of pain intensity and lower level of pain-related stress among patients with ovarian endometriomas.

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