7 results on '"Kunz, G"'
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2. Die Archimetra als neues morphologisch-funktionelles Konzept des Uterus sowie als Ort der Primärerkrankung bei Endometriose
- Author
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Leyendecker, G., Kunz, G., Noe, M., Herbertz, M., Beil, D., Huppert, P., and Mall, G.
- Published
- 1999
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3. Adenomyosis as a disorder of the early and late human reproductive period.
- Author
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Kunz, G., Herbertz, M., Beil, D., Huppert, P., and Leyendecker, G.
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ENDOMETRIOSIS , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *ENDOMETRIUM , *UTERUS , *HUMAN reproduction - Abstract
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) allows the diagnosis of adenomyosis in vivo with a high sensitivity and specificity. Usually the diagnosis of adenomyosis is obtained from women in their fourth to fifth decade of life. However, recent data suggest that adenomyosis may develop much sooner in life, particularly in women with endometriosis. In order to test these suggestions, MRI of the uterus in 227 women with and without endometriosis was performed and the results were related to the age of the subjects (age groups: 17-24, 25-29, 30-34 and >34 years). The study revealed that the process of the development of adenomyosis, represented by an increased diameter of the dorsal junctional zone of the uterus as the imaging correlative of the invasion of basal endometrium into the junctional zone, had already commenced early in the third decade of life and progressed steadily during the fourth decade in women with endometriosis. Women without endometriosis showed almost no signs of adenomyosis up to the age of 34 years. Surprisingly, parallel in both groups of women, a marked increase in the incidence of adenomyosis could be observed beyond the age of 34 years, thus representing a common phenomenon in the age-related pathophysiological continuum of adenomyosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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4. Uterotubal transport disorder in adenomyosis and endometriosis—a cause for infertility.
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Kissler, S., Hamscho, N., Zangos, S., Wiegratz, I., Schlichter, S., Menzel, C., Doebert, N., Gruenwald, F., Vogl, T. J., Gaetje, R., Rody, A., Siebzehnruebl, E., Kunz, G., Leyendecker, G., and Kaufmann, M.
- Subjects
ENDOMETRIOSIS ,INFERTILITY ,HUMAN fertility ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,DIAGNOSTIC imaging ,REPRODUCTIVE health - Abstract
Objective Uterine hyperperistalsis and dysperistalsis are common phenomena in endometriosis and may be responsible for reduced fertility in cases of minimal or mild extent of disease. Since a high prevalence of adenomyosis uteri has been well documented in association with endometriosis, we designed a study to examine whether hyperperistalsis and dysperistalsis are caused by the endometriosis itself or by the adenomyotic component of the disease. Design A prospective observational study. Setting University hospital, Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Division of Reproductive Medicine and Gynaecologic Endocrinology with 300 in vitro fertilisation/intracytoplasmatic sperm injection cycles and 350 intrauterine insemination cycles/year. Population Forty-one subjects with infertility and with laparoscopically proven endometriosis and patent fallopian tubes. Thirty-five subjects (85%) additionally showed signs of adenomyosis. Methods All subjects underwent T2-weighed magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and hysterosalpingoscintigraphy (HSSG) during the subsequent menstrual cycle. MRI revealed the extent of the adenomyotic component of the disease and the integrity of uterotubal transport capacity was evaluated by HSSG. Main outcome measures Influence of adenomyosis on uterotubal transport capacity in endometriosis. Results In 35 of the 41 subjects (85%) with endometriosis, signs of adenomyosis were detected using T2-weighed MRI. Two of six (33%) subjects with no adenomyosis (group I) showed dysperistalsis and hyperperistalsis, compared with 14 of 24 (58%) women with focal adenomyosis (group II) and 10 of 11 (91%) women with diffuse adenomyosis (seven showed a failure in transport capacity and two contralateral transport). Conclusions Our data suggest that endometriosis is associated with impeded hyperperistaltic and dysperistaltic uterotubal transport capacity. However, adenomyosis is of even more importance, especially when diffuse adenomyosis is detected. Both forms of adenomyosis are commonly found in subjects with mild to moderate endometriosis. We suggest that the extent of the adenomyotic component in subjects with endometriosis explains much of the reduced fertility in subjects with intact tubo-ovarian anatomy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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5. Endometriosis results from the dislocation of basal endometrium.
- Author
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Leyendecker, G., Herbertz, M., Kunz, G., and Mall, G.
- Abstract
Background: The hypothesis is tested that both adenomyotic and endometriotic lesions are derived from basal endometrium.Methods: Normal uteri and uteri with adenomyosis obtained by hysterectomy, excised endometriotic lesions and menstrual blood of women with and without endometriosis were used. Estrogen receptor (ER), progesterone receptor (PR), progesterone receptor B isoform (PR(B)) and P450 aromatase (P450A) immunohistochemistry was performed with the use of specific monoclonal antibodies.Results: With respect to the parameters studied there was a fundamental difference between the cyclical patterns of the basalis and the functionalis of the eutopic endometrium. The endometrium of endometriotic and adenomyotic lesions mimicked the cyclical pattern of the basalis. The peristromal muscular tissue of endometriotic and adenomyotic lesions displayed the same cyclical pattern of ER and PR expression as the archimyometrium. There was a significantly higher prevalence of fragments of shed basalis in menstrual blood of women with endometriosis than in healthy controls.Conclusions: These data suggest that ectopic endometrial lesions result from dislocation of basal endometrium. Dislocated basal endometrium has stem cell character resulting in the ectopic formation of all archimetrial components such as epithelial and stromal endometrium as well as peristromal muscular tissue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2002
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6. Reproductive pathology. Structural abnormalities of the uterine wall in women with endometriosis and infertility visualized by vaginal sonography and magnetic resonance imaging.
- Author
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Kunz, G., Beil, D., Huppert, P., and Leyendecker, G.
- Abstract
In women with endometriosis, the peristaltic activity of the uterus is significantly enhanced and may even become dysperistaltic at midcycle. Since uterine peristalsis is confined to the endometrium and the subendometrial myometrium with its predominantly circular arrangement of muscular fibres it was assumed that this dysfunction might be associated with structural abnormalities that could be visualized by high resolution ultrasonography and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Therefore, the uteri of women with and without endometriosis were subjected to endovaginal sonography (EVS) and to MRI. In EVS, women with laparoscopically proven endometriosis and infertility exhibited an infiltrative expansion of the archimetra in that the halo surrounding the uterine endometrium and representing the subendometrial myometrium was significantly enlarged compared with controls. The expansion was more pronounced in older than in younger women. There was, however, no relationship between the width of the expansion and the severity of the endometriotic disease. Similar data were obtained by MRI in that the `junctional zone' in women with endometriosis and infertility was expanded in comparison with controls. The results of this study provide further support to the notion that endometriosis is primarily a uterine disease. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2000
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7. Duration of dysmenorrhoea and extent of adenomyosis visualised by magnetic resonance imaging
- Author
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Kissler, S., Zangos, S., Kohl, J., Wiegratz, I., Rody, A., Gätje, R., Vogl, T.J., Kunz, G., Leyendecker, G., and Kaufmann, M.
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ENDOMETRIOSIS , *DYSMENORRHEA , *ENDOMETRIUM , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging - Abstract
Abstract: Objective: Enlargement of the junctional zone (JZ) on T2-weighted resonance imaging of the uterus has recently been established as the major criterion for adenomyosis in patients with endometriosis. This study was conducted to analyse the extent of adenomyosis using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and relate it to the duration of dysmenorrhoea. Study design: This was a prospective study of 70 patients presenting with the complaint of severe dysmenorrhoea. Forty patients (57%) reported dysmenorrhoea as their major complaint and 30 patients (43%) suffered additionally from infertility. Group I (n =40) consisted of patients with dysmenorrhoea of between 1 and 10 years’ duration, group II (n =30) consisted of patients with dysmenorrhoea of longer than 11 years’ duration. All patients underwent laparoscopy to detect the presence and degree of endometriosis, and all patients underwent T2-weighted resonance imaging of the uterus to detect the extent of adenomyosis by measurement of the “junctional zone”. Results: In group I, adenomyosis could be detected via MRI in 21 patients (52.5%), while 19 patients (47.5%) showed no signs of adenomyosis. By contrast, in group II a distinct enlargement of the JZ, as the major radiological criterion of adenomyosis, could be observed in 26 patients (87%), while only 4 patients (13%) revealed no signs of adenomyosis (p =0.04). The mean thickness of the JZ was significantly enlarged in group II (11.07mm) compared with group I (6.38mm; p <0.0001). The prevalence of adenomyosis in endometriosis after dysmenorrhoea of more than 11 years’ duration was 87%. Conclusions: In deep infiltrating endometriosis, a correlation between a specific localisation and dysmenorrhoea can often not be found. Recently, endometriosis and adenomyosis have been believed to result from a common uterine disease, the dislocation of the basal endometrium. Our data clearly show that dysmenorrhoea of long duration in patients who have had endometriosis for over a threshold value of 11 years is significantly related to adenomyosis of the uterus. Hence, evaluation of adenomyosis using MRI should become a standard procedure in cases of dysmenorrhoea and endometriosis. Severe dysmenorrhoea of long duration should always focus clinical interest on adenomyosis of the uterus. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2008
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