The Uterus photograph

The Uterus

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Originally published November 17, 1994
EditorsJurgis Gediminas Grudzinskas
T. Chard
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID2918015
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About The Uterus


This important new volume provides a wide-ranging and authoritative account of the uterus and its physiological role in fertility, normal pregnancy and delivery. . . .

Why Naga Munchetty is asking: ‘How are your periods?'

Why Naga Munchetty is asking: ‘How are your periods?'
Dec 2,2023 7:41 pm

... On average, it takes around eight years to be diagnosed with endometriosis, a condition that sees tissue similar to the lining of the womb growing outside The Uterus...

Pioneering operation combines cancer surgery and Caesarean

Pioneering operation combines cancer surgery and Caesarean
Nov 2,2023 6:11 pm

... " Explaining what the procedure entails, Prof Rosenthal said: " We lift the top of The Uterus out of the abdomen to bring the tubes and ovaries out of the abdominal incision so they are easily accessible...

Menstrual blood tests could aid women's healthcare

Menstrual blood tests could aid women's healthcare
Aug 24,2023 11:21 pm

... The endometrium is a membrane that lines The Uterus and thickens every month to support embryo implantation...

Woman 'joyous' after sister donates womb in UK first

Woman 'joyous' after sister donates womb in UK first
Aug 22,2023 8:10 pm

... These carry some long-term health risks, so The Uterus will be removed after a maximum of two pregnancies...

Period poverty: In Africa, women are being priced out of buying sanitary ware

Period poverty: In Africa, women are being priced out of buying sanitary ware
Aug 10,2023 9:31 pm

... " South African campaigner Nokuzola lives with endometriosis, a disease in which tissue similar to the lining of The Uterus grows outside it and can make menstruation very painful...

Gloucestershire: Mother bled to death after treatment delays

Gloucestershire: Mother bled to death after treatment delays
Mar 8,2023 6:30 am

... Soon after, consultants started battling to save Ms Abdelkarim s life by inserting a uterine tamponade balloon - a balloon inflated inside The Uterus to stop bleeding - and they performed a hysterectomy...

The new tech offering relief from the misery of period pain

The new tech offering relief from the misery of period pain
Jan 29,2023 8:41 pm

... Meanwhile, the heat panels soothe The Uterus and surrounding muscles...

Twins born from embryos frozen 30 years ago

Twins born from embryos frozen 30 years ago
Nov 22,2022 12:30 pm

... Embryologists at the NEDC s partner clinic Southeastern Fertility then performed the thaw and transfer to The Uterus earlier this year...

Menstrual blood tests could aid women's healthcare

Sep 17,2022 5:31 am

By Carrie KingBerlin

On any given day, around The World are on their period.

Given those numbers, surprisingly little is known about menstrual blood itself.

Sara Naseri, a Doctor , hopes to change that with her healthcare start-up Qvin. She believes that testing this largely-ignored monthly blood sample could offer ground-breaking new health insights.

Backing up this hypothesis will take time, however, as there is not much research on menstrual blood.

While still in Medical School , Dr Naseri could find only one study on menstrual blood, a 2012 paper that described its composition and structure and found 385 proteins that are unique to menstrual blood.

As well as blood, menstrual effluent contains vaginal secretions, cervical mucus, and endometrial cells. The endometrium is a membrane that lines The Uterus and thickens every month to support embryo implantation. If pregnancy doesn't occur, this lining.

" Blood is The Most commonly-used bodily fluid for medical decision-making, " says Dr Naseri. " I thought: 'Women bleed every month. Why has nobody used this blood for health purposes?'"

The Team at Qvin are trying to bridge the research gap by conducting a broad range Of Studies to assess if there are meaningful correlations between menstrual blood and blood taken from a vein or pricked finger.

Initial results have been promising but further studies are required.

If reliable parallels can be proven, testing menstrual blood could become a viable method of monitoring or diagnosing a range of common health conditions.

For example, if the biological markers for cholesterol or blood sugar levels are found to be equivalent, menstrual blood tests could be used as a monthly means of monitoring cardiovascular conditions or diabetes.

However, the Real Potential lies in finding non-invasive ways to diagnose and treat conditions that affect The Female Reproductive System .

A lack of research into female reproductive diseases has resulted in slow diagnosis times, relatively few treatment options, and tests that are often painful and distressing for the patient.

In the UK, funding goes to reproductive conditions, despite research showing that 31% of women with their Reproductive Health .

Less than half of those affected will seek medical help.

As well as a lack of research and precedent, seeking to test menstrual blood means negotiating a lot of resistance and societal taboos.

Berlin-based start-up Theblood struggled to find a lab partner that would agree to analyse menstrual blood samples.

" We have to do everything From Scratch , from the very, very start. Labs will test saliva, urine, or stool samples but there's just nothing for menstrual blood, " says Theblood co-founder Miriam Santer.

Dr Christine Metz, a professor and endometriosis researcher at the Feinstein Institutes for Medical Research at Northwell Health on Long Island , New York , believes that a " yuck factor" is a large part of The Reason there's been so little research into period blood.

" When we set out to collect menstrual effluent to study it, I had several physicians tell us that they can't ask their patients to do that, " she says. " [But when] we [put a call out on] Social Media , we got 6,000 people in our registry. Obviously, they got beyond the yuck factor. "

Testing menstrual blood has never been part of clinical gynaecology practice.

Endometriosis is one of The Most common gynaecological conditions. It's extremely painful and occurs when tissue that normally lines The Uterus grows on the outside of other organs in the pelvic cavity. It affects roughly 10% of women and girls. Diagnosis can take up to 12 years and can only be confirmed through surgery.

There are currently no effective treatments for endometriosis.

Things are slowly getting better thanks in part to awareness raised by prominent and.

Nevertheless, pain is currently treated with hormones that can have severe Side Effects and even a hysterectomy does not guarantee the removal of endometriosis lesions.

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Christine Metz is part of a team running The Rose (Research Outsmarts Endometriosis) study which is looking into menstrual effluent in an effort to speed up diagnosis times and develop treatments for endometriosis.

Getting funding for studying menstrual blood has been hard to come by. " I'm told all The Time : 'Oh, you should work in cancer. There's so much more money. ' And it's true. There's just No Money available for this. It's worth fighting all The Time to get a dime but it's very, very, very difficult, " she says.

Companies like Qvin and Theblood are paying for their studies with Venture Capital funding, in The Hope that that the fastest way to drive change may be through demonstrating that menstrual blood tests have value as a consumer product.

However, each admits that pitching to investors often means explaining the very basics of menstruation, like how tampons, sanitary pads, and menstrual cups are used.

Home-testing solutions would make testing for some conditions far more convenient.

Ashley Draper, a 36-year-old from Washington Dc , took part in a Qvin study that aimed to assess if menstrual blood could be used to screen for cervical cancer after responding to an Instagram ad.

For over Ten Years , abnormal smear test results have required Ms Draper to go in for cervical cancer checks every 6 months.

During a cervical cancer test, a Doctor will use a speculum to open the vagina and insert a small brush or spatula to scrape cell samples from the cervix at The Entrance to The Uterus . Pain relief is generally not offered.

" It's obviously a very invasive process, " says Ms Draper. " Although you're there to work with The Doctor . . As Far as going through The Process itself, you kind of feel just like a slab of meat on a table. It just seems like they're using very archaic processes. "

Reducing The High cost of care and feeling more in control of health outcomes is also appealing to Ms Draper. " For me, it's just a win overall if this becomes a product because it will reduce my anxiety and will give me more control over what's going on with The Testing . "

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Source of news: bbc.com

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