“Do you think my adenomyosis is serious now?” So many adenomyosis patients come to their morning sessions with a bunch of checklists and ask this question. In fact, I’ve spoken and spoken about this aspect many times before. To see whether your condition is serious, from these sheets alone is no way to directly see completely out, but also need to be based on your description, symptoms, the combination of these aspects to see whether it is serious, the most important thing is still to see from the following 3 points: 1, the severity of menstrual cramps Mainly depends on the size of your pain. Look at the severity of your menstrual cramps, need to take painkillers during menstruation, menstruation when there is no pain is very strong ah, can not go to work, bedridden and so on. White millet (nickname): because of menstrual cramps, pain at 12 o’clock at night can not sleep, if it is the daytime pain can not go to work, used to go to school in the school must be skipped this day, menstrual cramps during the sitting and standing, what posture is not comfortable. Oops, Dandan (nickname): menstruation is like a robbery, the pressure is super high, heavy menstrual flow, I think my blood is running dry! Menstrual cramps hurt so much that I beat myself up, rolled around in bed, would bawl and have a nervous breakdown. I would lose a few pounds after each aunt! That feeling is incomprehensible to anyone who doesn’t have menstrual cramps! And the aunt cycle would be early! Immortal Cancer is talking about our disease, which hurts until the body temperature rises and the pain is so intense that the whole body is sweating! In the case of people like those above, it’s more serious. This would require a uterine preservation surgery to fix the menstrual cramps. If there is a slight pain during your period, but you tolerate it and it passes. That’s still not too serious and you can put it off if you want to. You can also take painkillers to maintain. 2, the severity of anemia Depends on the size of your menstrual flow. Some people don’t have severe menstrual cramps, but the amount of menstruation is very large, resulting in severe anemia. Severe anemia can also cause some damage to your body. So if you don’t have menstrual cramps, but your menstrual flow is particularly heavy, and every time you have your period, it looks like a dike has broken, then you can go to the hospital to check if you are anemic, and if you are severely anemic, it is also more serious. 3. Uterus size Look at the size of your uterus. Some patients will have menstruation without pain, and the amount of menstruation is not big, but the uterus is particularly large, some of them have grown to more than 10cm. It is not safe to have a uterus that is too large, so special care should be taken. At this time, you should pay special attention to regular checkups, mainly to see the changes in the size of the uterus. If you have a uterus like the one on the checklist below, even if you don’t have anemia or menstrual cramps, it’s still a serious condition and you need to have surgery to preserve your uterus. If you have one of the above 3 items, you should not delay, you should have early surgery to preserve the uterus. In fact, most of the adenomyosis becomes more and more serious with time, adenomyosis is the invasion of the endometrium into the uterine myometrium. Adenomyosis is the invasion of the uterine lining into the myometrium. Every time you have a period, the lining of the uterus sheds itself to form the menstrual flow from your body. The lining of the uterus that enters the myometrium also sheds every month, but because it can’t be discharged from the myometrium, it only accumulates in the myometrium to form foci, so the foci will increase in size every time you have a menstrual cycle, and your condition will become more and more serious. Therefore, it is recommended that patients with adenomyosis be treated as soon as possible.