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Environmental Toxins. Other suspects for causing initial development of endometriosis are chemicals called organochlorines, which include dioxins (such as PCBs and furans). These chemicals have estrogen-like effects and are widely found in pesticides and other common products. The organochlorines have a particularly powerful impact on the ovary, and one study observed that animals exposed to some of these chemicals develop spontaneous endometriosis. Organochlorines have been associated with infertility, certain reproductive cancers, and autoimmune disorders, conditions that also occur with higher frequency in women with endometriosis.

Candida. There is absolutely no evidence that endometriosis is caused by candida (commonly called yeast infection), as claimed in some consumer publications.

Causes of Persistence and Growth of Endometriosis

There are two basic mysteries surrounding the persistence and growth of endometriosis:

  • Why do endometrial implants survive the attack by the immune system, which is typically launched against any foreign presence in the body?
  • How do these endometrial travelers develop new blood vessels and implant themselves in other locations?
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Impaired Immune System.Some research is focused on possible immune disorders in women with endometriosis. One theory proposes that women with endometriosis have fewer natural killer (NK) cells, which are factors in the immune system important for surveillance. In their absence, the immune system is weakened and may allow endometrial tissue to invade and take root. A recent study suggests that other types of immune system cells are also underactive in women with endometriosis, allowing the woman's body to tolerate the implanted tissue.

Some evidence suggests that endometriosis represents an autoimmune condition, in which the immune system launches an attack on its own cells and tissue. Much of the evidence rests on the relatively high incidence of other inflammatory autoimmune disorders (e.g., multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, lupus) that occur in women with endometriosis. It is unclear, however, how this response relates to endometriosis itself and whether endometriosis should be treated as an autoimmune condition.

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