Tag Archive for adhesions and infertility

Why Do I Have Chronic Pain After Surgery?

Surgery can be a necessary and lifesaving procedure.

However, surgery often results in side effects in the months and years after the procedure. Infection, inflammation, chronic pain and even bowel obstruction can occur after a surgical procedure as a result of adhesion formation.

Adhesions form as the bodies natural response to a trauma, surgery, infection or inflammation. They act as internal scars binding and covering tissues and organs throughout the body.

Unfortunately, these adhesions remain in the body long after the body has healed. This can result in pain after surgery, reduced range of motion, and dysfunction. In essence, these adhesions act as a strong glue restricting the body’s normal function.

Common surgeries that result in adhesion formation include:

  • Abdominal or pelvic surgery
  • C-section or Episiotomy
  • Laparotomy or Laparoscopy
  • Back or Hip Surgery
  • Gastric Bypass
  • Hysterectomy
  • Appendectomy
  • Mastectomy
  • Lysis of adhesions
  • Bowel Obstruction repair

The Wurn Technique is a natural treatment option for pain after surgery. This treatment uses over 200 hands on techniques to reduce the restriction and pain caused by adhesions.

Do you experience pain after surgery? What treatments have you tried?

We’d love to hear your comments.

Opening Blocked Fallopian Tubes – Surgical vs. Natural


Blocked Tubes and Infertility
As the place where natural conception occurs, the fallopian tubes are truly the place where life begins. Due to their location and size, fallopian tubes can become blocked from pelvic scars or adhesions. Together, these “mechanical causes” account for about 40% of all female infertility. Tubes can block near the uterus (proximal), by the ovary (distal) or in the middle of the tube (mid-tubal). In some cases, the tube swell with a fluid in a condition called hydrosalpinx.  While a single blocked tube impairs fertility, blockage of both tubes causes total infertility.

Surgical Tools

Surgery
Until recently, the only options for women with blocked tubes were to undergo surgery to open one or both tubes, or to remove the blocked tubes, and proceed directly to in vitro fertilization (IVF). This is often the recommended course that infertility specialists offer to women with hydrosalpinx.

 

Natural Treatment – The Wurn Technique
The Wurn TechniqueSeveral medical journals have now examined a manual physical therapy (Wurn Technique®) for its ability to open and return function to totally blocked fallopian tubes, including hydrosalpinx. The “hands-on” treatment opened tubes in most of the study participants, without surgery or drugs. Most of the successes had natural pregnancies and births after therapy. Several reported subsequent pregnancies/births, so the positive results lasted for years for these women. In other published studies, the therapy significantly decreased pelvic and intercourse pain, and improved sexual function. The therapy can be used as a stand-alone infertility treatment or in conjunction with regular medical care.

Surgical Treatment vs. Natural Treatment
In comparing the treatment options for opening blocked fallopian tubes, we find the following results:

Pros and cons of the Wurn Technique, a hands-on physical therapy:

  • Pros of the Wurn Technique
    • Requires no drugs
    • Requires no surgery
    • Published studies and citations show good results
    • Lower risks and costs than surgery
    • Results can last for years – allows for several natural pregnancies
    • Success opening blockages throughout the tube (proximal, mid-tubal, distal)
  • Cons of the Wurn Technique
    • Few US clinic locations (Florida, California, Washington DC)
    • Limited published data

Pros and cons of surgery to open blocked fallopian tubes:

  • Pros of Surgery
    • Many studies are published documenting its success
    • Has good success in opening blockages that are near the uterus
  • Cons of Surgery
    • Higher risks and costs than the Wurn Technique
    • Risk of damaging other tissues or organs during surgery
    • Poor results opening tubes blocked beyond the uterus (mid-tubal or distal)
    • Repair of blockage near the uterus gives a limited time to conceive
    • Removal of the tube is permanent
    • Possible side effects from anesthesia

Interested in learning more about opening blocked fallopian tubes with the Wurn Technique? Download our free eBook on treating blocked fallopian tubes naturally.

Blocked Tubes eBook

Preserving Fertility


Throughout the infertility community, there are many who wish they could turn back the hands of their fertility clock. In the years of the baby boomers, women started families at the ripe age of 17 and 18. Today’s generation of fertility age women have shown a growing trend in restructuring the life timeline of their parents and grandparents to pursue careers and life goals before beginning a family.

A recent article by NPR takes a look at Extend Fertility, the first company to sell egg freezing as a lifestyle choice.

Christy Jones, founder and CEO of Extend Fertility, suggests that younger women should begin to consider preserving their fertility by freezing their eggs in their early 20s and 30s.  This concept speaks to the growing trend of women having children later in life. However, the thought of preserving fertility for use later in life seems to overlook the issues seen by the infertility community.

The media seems to depict only two extremes in the current world of fertility. There are the extremely young, being “16 and Pregnant”, and the extremely old, made up of celebrities who are having children well into their 40s. However, what the media neglects to state, is that many of these celebrities have used donated eggs.

Neither of these publicized groups accurately represent the fertility struggles faced by one in eight US couples. Many of these couples face problems such as blocked fallopian tubesendometriosis, PCOShormonal infertility, secondary infertility, and unexplained infertility. For these couples, the egg is not the problem. Often times these fertility issues are caused by adhesions that restrict the reproductive organs and hormonal glands from working together as nature intended.

About ten years ago ASRM (the American Society for Reproductive Medicine) ran a campaign focused on making women mindful of the ever present fertility hourglass. The campaign received significant criticism from both career women and the infertility community. It seems the freezing of ones eggs oversimplifies the problems related to infertility. However, for those who have encountered problems with their eggs later in life, it may seem a worthy investment.

What are your thoughts? Leave a comment below.

Listen Live: Overcome Infertility and Pain, Naturally

 

Online with Andrea

Join us on June 1st at 7:30 pm EST for a live radio show with Larry and Belinda Wurn, founders of the Wurn Technique and Clear Passage Physical Therapy. This revolutionary therapy treats infertility, blocked fallopian tubes, pain, adhesions, and endometriosis without surgery or drugs.

During this show, the Wurn’s will share the story of how they developed a hands on physical therapy that treats infertility, adhesions, pelvic pain, and endometriosis. They will also speak to physicians who endorse their work as well as previous patients who experienced remarkable results after receiving therapy.

How to Listen Live

Visit the show’s page on Blog Talk Radio on June 1st at 7:30 pm EST.

How to Join the Discussion

Join us on Twitter to ask questions and connect with other listeners. Use the hashtag #clearpassage to join the discussion.

How to Listen Later

Miss the show live? You can visit the show’s archive to listen anytime you’d like.

How to Learn More about Clear Passage and the Wurn Technique

Visit our website at www.clearpassage.com or request more information.

Prior C-Section Can Cause Adhesions

C-Section Adhesions Scar Tissue

C-section surgery generally causes adhesions to form. These adhesions can pull or spread into neighboring structures, causing c-section pain or dysfunction, including secondary infertility.

C-section Can Cause Adhesions

Cesarean section delivery (C-section) is the most common surgery among women in the US. Unfortunately, this invasive surgical procedure requires a great deal of healing to occur. Adhesions are one of the bodies automatic responses to traumas such as a fall, a surgery, an infection, or an inflammation. These adhesions are much like thick strands of nylon rope that bind to nearby structures and restrict and cover the traumatized area. Though they are designed to help the body heal, adhesions often cause ongoing pain or dysfunction, long after the surface scars have healed.

Adhesions Can Cause Pain

Because adhesions attach to nearby tissues and organs, they create a pull or restriction in the pelvis, which often results in pain. As the organs, tissues, and muscles attempt to move, a resulting pain occurs.

Secondary Infertility if often caused by C-section Adhesions

Adhesions that form after a C-section can bind together delicate reproductive structures, causing dysfunction and secondary infertility.

Adhesions Can Cause Secondary Infertility

As adhesions form throughout the pelvis, they can attach to the delicate organs of the female reproductive system. These strong, fibrous bands restrict the mobility and function of these organs, often causing secondary infertility.

Adhesions Can Cause Digestive Issues

Adhesions can also affect regular digestion by attaching to the outside or inside of the intestine wall. As adhesions bonds grow, they restrict the regular function of digestion, and can often lead to a partial bowel obstruction.

Treatment for Adhesions

Often times, pain killers or infertility drugs are offered as a treatment for those who suffer from post-surgical adhesions. Unfortunately, drugs merely mask the true problem of adhesions and offer no long-term solutions. The next step in treatment is to undergo surgery to cut or burn adhesion bonds throughout the pelvis. However, the trauma of an additional surgery causes additional adhesions to form, which can create an endless cycle of adhesions and surgery.

A manual physical therapy, called the Wurn Technique, has shown excellent results in decreasing pain and increasing function related to adhesions. This therapy feels much like a deep pelvic massage as therapists use their hands to break down the bonds of adhesions throughout the pelvis. This therapy has been endorsed by physicians from Harvard, Northwestern, and Columbia as an alternative treatment to surgery. Click here to learn more about this treatment for post C-section adhesions.

“What a much-needed, useful and safe way to deal with the common, yet mystifying problem of adhesions. You have perfected a technique to treat adhesions, with years of experience, scientific backup and case studies to prove it.”

-Dr. Leslie Mendoza Temple, Northwestern University Medical Director