A woman suffers pain from mysterious illness for 20 years while finally diagnosed
A woman who has suffered intensely painful periods for 20 years has finally been diagnosed with a detected disease – helping to remove her that began to bother her before becoming a teenager.
Jen Moore, 35, a former wedding cake bakery, said she couldn’t get up straight when she first began to experience painful periods As a girl of 11 years.
She said the doctors put her on birth control pills to try to reduce the period, according to the SWWS news agency – but that did not alleviate her pain over the years.
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The doctors informed her that what she experienced was “normal,” she told the news agency – and that she was only someone who “unhappy” had painful menstruation.
But for time Coid LockdownWhen she came down from contraceptives after 22 years, she said that “she did not recognize the person she became” and would often be deducted from losing pain and blood.
When she went to the doctor for her menstrual pain and had an ultrasound, She was told that no endometriosis had not been detected, she told Swns.
He is not satisfied, Moore, from Cambridge, England, he paid for himself to have MRI scanning.
Finally, she was diagnosed with endometriosis and adenomyosis, the conditions in which the uterine mucosa grows in places where it should not be.
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Said Moore, “At the time, I thought it was normal because I didn’t know anything different.”
When she was young, she said, her mother he took to see the doctors “And Moore said she was told that her painful periods would eventually stop.”
“I thought it was normal because I didn’t know otherwise.”
She said the doctors told her that even if she had endometriosis, “all she would do was put on the tablet.”
She also said that she still felt “anger” to what happened to her today.
“I also feel broken from the heart,” Swws said, “thinking about himself as an 11-year-old who had no idea he would go through so many of these things.”
She added, “I feel that generations are getting up and they no longer want to tolerate it.”
Still, “I feel that it should not fall for patients to do so,” she said.
“I’m a doctor – here’s a wellness routine that I follow a longer, healthier life”
Moore said that even now he feels “exhausted” and that “is not an area of my life” that has not touched it.
She said that even though she had had painful periods for so long, she wanted to go to college and try You live as a normal life What is possible, “despite being tied to the bed” for about a week.
She learned, as she said, that she had endometriosis on the womb and bladder – “It’s everywhere, it’s simply ruthless.”
She said “this condition has harmed its organs for 22 years – it is a lot of harm to abolish, so The operations are Never magic and [don’t] Always ensure life without pain. “
“Unfortunately,” she said, “there is still a lot of endometriosis for me.”
There is a “urgent need for greater consciousness.”
Janet Lindsay, Executive Director of Welbeing of Women, Swws said: “Endometriosis is a condition that affects The lives of many womenOften years before diagnosis is made … For too long, female pain is rejected or misunderstood. “
There is a “urgent need,” she said, “for greater consciousness, early diagnosis and better support to those who live with the situation.”
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Last year, Bindi Irwin, the daughter of the late Steve “Hunter Crocodile” Irwin, talked about her recovery from surgery after the diagnosis of endometriosis.
Irwin, 26, said her “inevitable” pain was rejected by doctors for 10 years while tested for all kinds of diseases.
“I was tested for everything,” Irwin told People last summer. “Every tropical disease, Lyme disease, cancer, you called. I had every blood test and scanning.”
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According to the Mayo Clinic, endometriosis is a condition of “in which cells similar to the uterine or endometrial mucosa grow outside the uterus,” as Fox News Digital reported earlier.
“Endometriosis often includes pelvic tissue and can wrap ovaries and fallopian tubes. “
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The condition can be difficult for those who suffer from it – and can affect fertility and menstruation.
Lauryn Overhultz of Fox News Digital contributed to reporting.