The most commonly affected sites are the pelvic organs
and peritoneum, although other parts of the body such as the lungs are
occasionaly affected. The extent of the disease varies from a few, small
lesions on otherwise normal pelvic organs to large, ovarian endometriotic
cysts (endometriomas) and/or extensive fibrosis and adhesion formation
causing marked distortion of pelvic anatomy. Disease severity is assessed
by simply describing the findings at surgery or quantitatively, using
a classification system such as the one developed by the American Society
for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM)
(1997). There is no correlation between such systems and the type or
severity of pain symptoms.
Endometriosis typically appears as superficial "powder-burn"
or "gunshot" lesions on the ovaries, serosal surfaces and
peritoneum - black, dark-brown, or bluish puckered lesions, nodules
or small cysts containing old haemorrhage surrounded by a variable extent
of fibrosis. Atypical or "subtle" lesions are also common,
including red implants (petechial, vesicular, polypoid, hemorrhagic,
red flame-like) and serous or clear vesicles. Other appearances include
white plaques or scarring and yellow-brown peritoneal discoloration
of the peritoneum.
Endometriomas usually contain thick fluid like tar;
such cysts are often densely adherent to the peritoneum of the ovarian
fossa and the surrounding fibrosis may involve the tubes and bowel.
Deeply infiltrating endometriotic nodules extend more than 5 mm beneath
the peritoneum and may involve the uterosacral ligaments, vagina, bowel,
bladder or ureters.
Concise