I'm sorry to read about your painIt reminds me of the pain from follicular ovarian cysts bursting, especially if as you describe the pain was acute and temporary. It would happen to me as I walked to university and I'd have to stop, sit on a bench and cry. After about half an hour it would subside. (The thought of a cool tile floor is somehow comforting...) I hope it's just your IUD that needs to be removed. The good thing is that follicular cysts can be controlled pretty easily by hormones (although I not every woman tolerates the pill all that well...).
As far as I know there is only one way to know for sure if a woman has endometriosis: go and look (i.e. surgery). It is not visible with ultrasound imagery (unlike cysts). However, there are ways to rule it out and/or treat the symptoms through some hormonal methods that simulate menopause. My sister-in-law just went through this and it wasn't very fun.
Please keep us updated... I think it's important for women to share their experience of pain. Our sense of "normal" and of what is appropriate to talk about is so skewed sometimes... When I finally got a diagnosis for my cysts, I talked about it to women around me and found out that so many others had gone through the same. Had I known earlier that it was a possibility, it would have made things a lot simpler at the initial ER visits.



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It reminds me of the pain from follicular ovarian cysts bursting, especially if as you describe the pain was acute and temporary. It would happen to me as I walked to university and I'd have to stop, sit on a bench and cry. After about half an hour it would subside. (The thought of a cool tile floor is somehow comforting...) I hope it's just your IUD that needs to be removed. The good thing is that follicular cysts can be controlled pretty easily by hormones (although I not every woman tolerates the pill all that well...).
