The Presence of Endometriosis in the Human Fetus
This chapter summarizes recent evidence on the presence of endometriosis in human fetuses, discussing its potential clinical and pathological implications.
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This chapter summarizes evidence for the presence of endometriosis in the human fetus and discusses potential clinical and pathological implications. Drawing on prior research, the authors argue that altered fine-tuning of the female genital system developmental program during fetal life may be the initiating pathogenetic event leading to endometriosis later, and they contextualize this with major hypotheses such as retrograde menstruation and coelomic metaplasia, alongside experimental evidence from the group and others. A stated limitation is that, despite its frequency and impact, the chapter notes that pathogenesis, diagnosis, and therapy are not perfectly delineated. This paper is centrally about endometriosis — it focuses on evidence that endometriosis is present in the human fetus and on fetal developmental mechanisms that may drive later disease.
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References (27)
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- Discussion via openalex
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