Endometriosis | Vital Health Endometriosis Center https://www.vitalhealth.com A women's healthcare, endometriosis, and pelvic pain treatment center Thu, 05 Nov 2020 23:29:23 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Miss USA contestant Joins the Fight for Endo Awareness https://www.vitalhealth.com/endo-blog/miss-usa-contestant-joins-fight-endo-awareness/ Thu, 08 Oct 2020 19:51:06 +0000 https://www.vitalhealth.com/?p=18818 The post Miss USA contestant Joins the Fight for Endo Awareness appeared first on Vital Health Endometriosis Center.

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Vital Health patient Justice Enlow, Miss Tennessee USA 2020 fights for endo awareness as she strives to empower other women with endometriosis to find life-changing treatment as she did at Vital Health Endometriosis Center.

“I believe that every woman deserves a life ruled by their passions, purpose, and dreams rather than by pain.” — Justice Enlow, Miss Tennessee USA 2020

Justice suffered for 10 years with symptoms of endometriosis, including painful periods, digestive issues, chronic abdominal and pelvic pain, and extreme fatigue. She says, “The pain got so bad that I ended up on prescription pain medication and missed a significant portion of my college classes.”

Misdiagnoses are too common, but you can get your life back

In those painful 10 years, Justice sought treatment from her doctors and was misdiagnosed several times. Her life changed when she found Vital Health Endometriosis Center and internationally renowned endometriosis specialist Dr. Andrew S. Cook, M.D.

“Dr. Cook and the entire staff at Vital Health Institute were an answer to my prayers,” she says. “They were the first medical professionals that I spoke with who validated my pain but also gave me hope for my future. I am now almost 3 years post-op and can honestly say that Dr. Cook gave me back my life.”

Living her dream and using her platform to empower women with endo

Today, Justice is spreading awareness and fighting for other women with endometriosis in her role as Miss Tennessee USA 2020. And now, by competing in Miss USA 2020 pageant, she feels she has an even greater opportunity to raise awareness. Her platform is empowering women with endometriosis to be their own health advocates in finding treatment.

“I am living out my dream of competing for Miss USA because of the amazing care that I received at Vital Health Institute,” she says. Justice is also the founder of Justice For Women, a non-profit that believes “no person, prejudice, or health concern should stand between a woman and her purpose.”

Understanding the difference an Endometriosis Specialist makes

Endometriosis is a leading cause of chronic pelvic pain in women, and it can have a dramatic effect on all aspects of a woman’s quality of life. In addition to being misdiagnosed, many women, before being treated by Dr. Cook, have undergone one, and sometimes multiple, failed surgeries that use outdated techniques such as ablation. Dr. Cook has created a hashtag on Instagram called #BanTheBurn in an effort to bring awareness to and save women from the pain and trauma they are experiencing in these failed surgeries. Justice remarked “I will forever be grateful that Dr. Cook was the one and only surgeon that I saw.” Her fight to raise awareness will help combat the many myths that exist regarding endometriosis. On her website, she talks about her treatment journey in more detail, here.

Next Steps

Read more about “What it Really Means to have Endometriosis” and download the full PDF guide to share with friends and family here.
You may also request a screen-share virtual consult to discuss your specific case with Dr. Cook.
The Vital Health team wants to help you get your life back, just as we were able to help Justice and many other women like her. Use this form to request a complimentary record review.

Help Justice raise awareness by spreading the word.

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Video: Why Did My Endometriosis Surgery Fail – Part 1 https://www.vitalhealth.com/endo-blog/coagulation-surgery-versus-wide-excision-surgery/ https://www.vitalhealth.com/endo-blog/coagulation-surgery-versus-wide-excision-surgery/#comments Fri, 06 Sep 2019 04:25:55 +0000 https://www.vitalhealth.com/?p=18499 The post Video: Why Did My Endometriosis Surgery Fail – Part 1 appeared first on Vital Health Endometriosis Center.

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Coagulation Surgery versus Wide Excision Surgery

Why is it so common to have an endo surgery fail? Could it be traced back to the type of surgery that is being performed, whether it’s Coagulation Surgery or Wide Excision Surgery?

Sometimes, it’s unfortunately not until a person has had several failed surgeries that she finally asks what the difference is between Coagulation Surgery and Wide Excision Surgery?  Or what the advantages and disadvantages of Coagulation Surgery and Wide Excision Surgery are?  Below, we will answer all of these questions for you as we watch part 1 of 3 in the “Why Did My Endo Surgery Fail?” series from Dr. Andrew Cook.

TRANSCRIPT

On average, by the time patients get to see me they’ve been through three or four surgeries previously. So a common question I get is “why did my surgery fail?” And, there’s a lot of reasons, but one reason that we – and the reason we’re going to talk about today –  is that it was an outdated coagulation (or burning kind of) surgery. And so I want to talk briefly about

What is coagulation surgery? and  What is wide excision surgery? and what are the differences between these two types of surgeries.

Coagulation surgery uses electrosurgery to burn the tissue. The problem with that is it’s very imprecise. There is also a lot of lateral spread of heat so the very center part (of the affected tissue) – it’s black – it’s a “crispy critter” (it’s dead). The tissue next to it there is what is called a “zone of necrosis”. It looks okay but it’s been heated enough that it’s dead. And so, in the pelvis where there’s endometriosis you have to make sure to stay away from any critical structure of the ureters blood vessels, bowel, bladder, that kind of stuff. And so the advantage of coagulation surgery is – “it is pretty easy, you just stick the thing in there and burn it a little bit and it doesn’t take too long”.

High recurrence rate and other disadvantages of coagulation surgery for endometriosis

The disadvantages are we now know that in the majority of cases it doesn’t remove all the endometriosis and so there’s a high recurrence rate with a coagulation surgery. It damages the tissue so the tissue that’s left behind is damaged, inflamed and – from what we’re starting to understand with how pain works with endometriosis – it may actually make that part of the condition worse (more painful).

What’s the difference between excision surgery and wide excision surgery?

Next, we’re going to talk about wide excision surgery. I’ve been asked, “What’s the difference between excision and wide excision?”

Excision means “to cut out or to remove”. Wide excision means we’re going to take a border of normal-appearing tissue. The inside of the body is lined by the peritoneum (you can think of it like Saran wrap that covers everything – there’s no skin inside) and if we had endometriosis, it could be thought of to be like chia seeds on the Saran wrap. Wherever the endometriosis has spread we need to make a cut surrounding all the peritoneum that has endometriosis, lift the edge up, and cut it out  – that’s wide excision.

Just like if you had a mole, you know the doctor wouldn’t burn it or cut right around the little edge of it, but he’s going to take some normal tissue because if it (gets tested and) does come back as being cancerous, then we all want to know, “Did you get it all?”

And just so you know, endometriosis is not a cancer but we do have to get it all (to consider the surgery a success).

 

Why doesn’t everybody do excision surgery?

So why did why doesn’t everybody do wide excision surgery

There are several reasons:

  • Wide excision takes a much higher technical skill level
  • wide excision is not really a skill that’s taught routinely in that residency programs
  • wide excision surgery does take longer

 

The advantages of wide excision

  • lower recurrence rates of endometriosis
  • wide excision surgery usually gets all the endometriosis
  • there’s little or no conduction of heat so the tissue that’s left behind is good, healthy tissue and we’ve removed any excess nerve growth in the area.

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Video: Endometriosis Diagnosis https://www.vitalhealth.com/endo-blog/endometriosis-diagnosis/ https://www.vitalhealth.com/endo-blog/endometriosis-diagnosis/#respond Mon, 24 Jun 2019 18:51:52 +0000 https://www.vitalhealth.com/?p=18247 The post Video: Endometriosis Diagnosis appeared first on Vital Health Endometriosis Center.

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Diagnosing Endometriosis

On average, it takes 10 years for a woman to get a diagnosis of endometriosis. Dr. Cook is here to set the record straight. Diagnosing endometriosis is 10 times easier than treating it.

For an endometriosis specialist, it’s not difficult to diagnose endometriosis. There are two tests currently for endo, one is a screening test and the other a diagnostic test. The screening test is like a pap smear and is a relatively inexpensive test. It is able to pick up most of the people who have endometriosis, but it will also pick up some that don’t have it. From there, a diagnostic test is performed through laparoscopic surgery to determine if endometriosis is present. Dr. Cook recommends doing a screening test first based on the case history and then move into diagnosis with laparoscopic surgery.

One of the most common stories from women who are eventually diagnosed with endometriosis is the change is their periods as they get older. A woman first gets her period and her cramps are mild or non-existent, but as she gets older, going through Junior High, High School, and College, the cramps are getting unbearable and the periods are getting worse and more prolonged. Pain with intercourse, pain with bowel movements, and lower back pain are classic endometriosis symptoms. If these progressive symptoms are something you’ve experienced, it almost certain that you have endometriosis.

Over the decades, Dr. Cook has heard so many similar stories that he has a 90% accuracy of diagnosing endometriosis before any tests are performed.

The screening test is much cheaper and can be done for everybody. The diagnostic testing is more expensive, but it is more accurate. The screening test will let Dr. Cook know if you should undergo a diagnostic test through laparoscopic surgery.

If you are in pain and suffering, and you’ve had a progressive degree of pain with your period, a progressive number of days that you’re in pain, pain with intercourse, pain with bowel movements, lower back pain, until proven otherwise, you have endometriosis. Don’t stop until you find somebody to work with you to figure it out.

TRANSCRIPT
Hi guys, we’re here talking about the diagnosis of endometriosis and I’m super excited about this week’s topic. We’ve been going over this last couple of weeks talking about what’s the screening test, what’s the diagnostic test, and some of the different aspects of it. Today we’re talking about diagnosis of endometriosis. It’s easy to do, and we’re going to talk about how to get your doctor to do it. These are the basic steps so stay tuned.

Now, the laparoscope allows us to look inside, so we can see the endometriosis, so it’s not a question, we’re not guessing; it’s either there or it’s not.

Now, the screening test, the history, gives us the information to know if it’s medically indicated to do a diagnostic laparoscopy to look for endometriosis. I think part of the resistance is that we get into, “Should it be treated, how should it be treated, am I competent to treat it,” and all these things. So let’s separate that out. And I think at least demand to get a diagnostic laparoscopy with appropriate documentation. And what do I mean by that? Well, currently the standard is that the surgeon looks in and sees what they see, maybe does whatever procedures they do, and then they dictate it or they make a written documentation of the interpretation of what they saw and what they thought they saw, which may or may not be correct. So what needs to happen is adequate photo documentation. I’m going to show you what needs to be done today. So, if the proper photographs were taken then, anybody can go back and look at them and double check. And if the surgeon didn’t recognize endometriosis and overlooked it, then we can see that. I mean there’s no harm in that. If we can get the proper steps, then we can start to get the right information because, unlike a blood test that’s standardized we’ll get the same result every single time. With a diagnostic laparoscopy it’s highly dependent upon the surgeon and they know what they’re looking for. And so it can be very sensitive or it can be very insensitive. And it can provide the wrong diagnosis saying that you don’t have endometriosis.

So what I’m going to do is show you the basic steps that are required to diagnose and adequately document the endometriosis. With that, if you can get an agreement ahead of time, then we have the evaluation of your surgeon, and he can always get a second opinion to double check.

What we have is a drawing or picture of the pelvis here. This is kind of if you’re up above looking down into your pelvis, so if you could look through your belly button into the pelvis. What we have here is the pubic bone up front, we have the bladder behind it. This is the uterus, the right ovary and fallopian tube here, the left ovary and fallopian tube.

These are the uterosacral ligaments that have nerves that go to the lower back, so that’s why endo here causes lower back pain. This is the sigmoid colon coming down into the rectum. Now, from far away, it’s easy to miss endometriosis. So, with the photo documentation, what we have to do is, going close with the laparoscope, a picture needs to be taken of the left side of the bladder. And then we need a picture of the right side of the bladder. And ideally, some pictures as close as possible so we can see the detail. And then the left pelvic sidewall here, the ovary is connected up to the uterus and then it’s connected here. So it’s kind of like on a door hinge, the ovary flips up and you need to look at all this area under here, and get a close photograph of that. Now, the other thing I almost forgot to mention is, we don’t see any bowel in here. It’s all up above and that’s because the patient’s head is tilted down. You have to get all the bowel out of the pelvis, you see a lot of pictures of bowels in here. This area here, the pararectal space we need to look very closely in here, and very closely over on the right side, and then another photograph with the ovary flipped up. Ideally, looking at both sides of the ovary with photographs to see if there’s any endometriosis there. So, an overall picture is great, but we need a couple of the bladder, we need close up photographs with the right pelvic sidewall, left pelvic sidewall, left pararectal space including the rectovaginal area, and the right pararectal area.

And with all that, that’s how we can get good photographs from the surgery that you’re going through, to be able to double check this, and then they get the answers. And so, it’s just, it’s crazy. So if we take these basic steps we can get a proper documentation, we can start to get the answer. And then if you have the documentation, “Yes, I have endometriosis,” then we can start to go through step by step. What are the things that can be done to treat endometriosis? What are the different options? And so, hopefully this helps. I think if we implemented these few basic easy steps right now, we would be able to get rid of that 10 years of pain and suffering that women are going through so. Y’all have a great weekend and week, and we’ll talk later. Take care.

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The Durango Herald welcomes Vital Health to Colorado https://www.vitalhealth.com/endo-blog/the-durango-herald-welcomes-vital-health-to-colorado/ https://www.vitalhealth.com/endo-blog/the-durango-herald-welcomes-vital-health-to-colorado/#respond Thu, 02 May 2019 18:41:19 +0000 https://www.vitalhealth.com/?p=17981 The post The Durango Herald welcomes Vital Health to Colorado appeared first on Vital Health Endometriosis Center.

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Vital Health Endometriosis Centers has opened a new location in Durango, Colorado. Special thanks to The Durango Herald for helping to welcome us to the region in their very informative article about endometriosis. Durango is easily accessible from the Four Corners region with direct flights from Denver, Dallas, and Phoenix.
Visit the Durango location at 1199 Main Ave., Suite #217, Durango, CO 81301-4158.

Endometriosis is often misunderstood by many doctors and can cause years of discomfort and agonizing pain.

Dr. Andrew Cook of Vital Health Endometriosis Centers is an internationally known endometriosis specialist that works with women who have had endometriosis for years and gone through many failed surgeries.

Endometriosis is pretty common, affecting 1 in 10 women of the reproductive age in the U.S. This painful condition takes place when tissue appears outside the uterus in the body cavity and can cause infertility.

There are multiple types of endometriosis depending on where the tissue growth is occurring. It can be found on the ovaries, fallopian tubes, bladder, and tissue lining the pelvis.

Many doctors dismiss endometriosis sufferers, saying they are just having a painful period, the pain is in their heads, or they want to obtain pain pills.

But Dr. Cook listens to his patients and their symptoms to diagnose them correctly, often with endometriosis. He sees approximately 600 patients per year. Read their testimonials.

About 70% of Dr. Cook’s patients travel from around the world to receive treatment from him.

Endometriosis invades and destroys tissue, so Dr. Andrew Cook treats it similar to how cancer is treated, removing it completely. He cuts out the healthy tissue bordering the endometriosis to ensure that it doesn’t come back. Most doctors just burn away the endometriosis tissue, which later returns.

Of the surgeries that Dr. Cook performs, about 50% of patients are relieved of all their pain.

Vital Health Endometriosis Centers has locations in Los Gatos, California and now Durango, Colorado. Dr. Cook spends about 4 or 5 months a year in Durango.

Start Your Healing Journey Now

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The “Pregnancy Cures Endometriosis” Myth https://www.vitalhealth.com/endo-blog/pregnancy-myth/ https://www.vitalhealth.com/endo-blog/pregnancy-myth/#respond Fri, 16 Mar 2018 00:31:51 +0000 https://www.vitalhealth.com/?p=15443 The post The “Pregnancy Cures Endometriosis” Myth appeared first on Vital Health Endometriosis Center.

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This myth can actually be traced back to Hippocrates in 5th century BC.  He believed that women had “wandering wombs” that caused “hysteria” and that only by having sex and procreation with a man, would they be cured.

I’d like to believe we’ve advanced our thinking since then, but unfortunately with the current American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology (ACOG) endometriosis guidelines, and the lack of clinical evidence around endometriosis and women’s health in general, myths like these can prevail in the clinical setting.  As a physician, it’s difficult to see OB-GYN’s in 2018 “prescribe” pregnancy as a cure for endometriosis when it is patently untrue.

Now, is it true that if a woman’s pain is only a few days around her period she may get relief during her pregnancy and for a period of time following delivery, especially if she is breastfeeding. Some women may experience a generalized decrease in pain while pregnant. This is most likely due to hormonal changes and possibly a result of autoimmune features of pregnancy and stem cells that are produced during this time.  While unlikely, there are others who will have pregnancies that may have complications because of endometriosis (increased risk of placenta previa with deeply invasive disease), or become highly symptomatic in the post-partum period, and beyond, which of course can be very detrimental to both mother and child.

Pregnancy does not cure endometriosis. It is irresponsible and negligent for doctors to suggest pregnancy to a woman as a treatment for endometriosis, especially if she is in severe pain, as the pain will usually return after delivery. Having to take care of a newborn child while dealing with incapacitating pain only creates more problems for a woman suffering from endometriosis.  A physician recommending pregnancy as treatment for endometriosis is a red flag as it is a sign of a basic misunderstanding of this disease by the physician and makes it likely the patient hasn’t been properly treated, or sometimes even diagnosed.  As well, for a woman who does want to have children at that time, it can cause psychological trauma if she does not become pregnant after trying. All in all, it is time to take this centuries-old myth out of clinically-evidenced based medical practices.

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Thoughts on “Birth Control Your Own Adventure” https://www.vitalhealth.com/endo-blog/thoughts-birth-control-adventure/ https://www.vitalhealth.com/endo-blog/thoughts-birth-control-adventure/#respond Wed, 10 Jan 2018 21:33:49 +0000 https://www.vitalhealth.com/?p=15192 The post Thoughts on “Birth Control Your Own Adventure” appeared first on Vital Health Endometriosis Center.

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Yesterday in the New York Times endometriosis patient Sindha Agha (not my patient) wrote a thought-provoking op-ed about her adventures in pharmaceutical hormone treatment for her endometriosis. What struck me the most about her accounts was the repetitive nature of hormones the care providers she saw offered. Over and over they offered her palliative treatments to her disease, with no thought to side effects or to an effective patient outcome. While Agha rightly was careful not to demonize birth control, what we are really talking about here is not birth control but treatment options for a disease than strike as many women as diabetes in their prime years, often rendering them with chronic, debilitating pain and organ dysfunction.

As a physician who treats endometriosis patients with wide excision surgical therapy, this makes me so sad. The fact that here we are more than twenty-five years after wide excision was pioneered, numerous clinical, peer-reviewed publications demonstrate it’s effectiveness, and the successes I’ve seen in my own practice of wide excision restoring women to their original vitality – yet ob-gyns are still just offering palliative care in the form of hormones, is dismaying to say the least. If hormones get the patient to the outcome she desires – functionality and return of quality of life, then they are an effective treatment. However, if they do not, we now know that delaying effective treatment to endometriosis patients in the form of palliative care can allow the disease to get more invasive and symptomatic. While there is currently no cure for endometriosis, wide excision surgery done by someone who can effectively identify the disease can be a highly effective therapy, and even curative. In addition, many women successfully manage their symptoms with alternative modalities from dietary changes to acupuncture. In short, health and wellness is not a pharmaceutical deficiency.

We now know that delaying effective treatment to endometriosis patients in the form of palliative care can allow the disease to get more invasive and symptomatic.

There are so many factors that play into the reasons for the lack of treatment options, including the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) refusing to update their outdated standards of care for endometriosis, to larger structural issues our entire healthcare system now grapples with. Over and over, women who have this disease get lost in the shuffle. Fortunately there are so many amazing clinical and patient activists who fight daily for changes in standards of care from Casey Berna to Shannon Cohn.

When I see my patients, the first thing I always do is just listen. This simple but powerful tool allows me as the physician a window into a woman’s experience. I’m hoping ob-gyn’s across the country, ACOG, and the larger medical system start to listen too.

Dr. Andrew Cook

Ready to start your healing journey? Request a free virtual consultation today.

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Teen’s Tenacity Leads to Endometriosis Diagnosis: Video Story https://www.vitalhealth.com/endo-blog/teen-endometriosis-diagnosis-video/ https://www.vitalhealth.com/endo-blog/teen-endometriosis-diagnosis-video/#comments Thu, 07 Jan 2016 19:44:19 +0000 https://www.vitalhealth.com/?p=14594 The post Teen’s Tenacity Leads to Endometriosis Diagnosis: Video Story appeared first on Vital Health Endometriosis Center.

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Because so few people know that 70% of teens who experience chronic pelvic pain are later given an endometriosis diagnosis, many young women suffer years of pain when it’s overlooked as a potential diagnosis. Endometriosis is generally thought of as unique to grown women and not considered as a possibility for adolescents and teens.

One young woman, Erika, would like to change that lack of awareness for young girls and teens experiencing chronic pelvic pain. Endometriosis Excision Ends Teen’s Years of Pelvic Pain is Erika’s video story of her four-year journey to reclaim her life without disabling pelvic pain.

“I just want other girls to realize that there is hope. You can regain your life. It’s not a life sentence of pain. If you get to the right surgeon you can regain your life and you can progress as a person without pain.”

Erika’s Endometriosis Diagnosis Mission

Erika has “gone public” with her story in the hope of helping other young girls and teens to avoid what she had to endure. Erika’s story recounts the battle she and her mother fought to overcome years of pelvic pain and misdiagnosis to finally reclaim her life.

Erika’s story – and her mother’s story – is a story of resilience and determination to find answers that would restore Erika’s life. Today, after her endometriosis surgery, she is without pelvic pain and living a normal life. Her message: “You can regain your life. It’s not a life sentence of pain.”

Erika had help – her mother, family and a streak of perseverance that finally got her a correct diagnosis of endometriosis. And she’s now just as tenacious in wanting young women and their families to insist on having their physicians consider the possibility of an endometriosis diagnosis in their diagnostic quest.

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