Endometriosis

$47.00

This Universal Sound Therapy Protocol was designed specifically to help your body overcome Endometriosis.

Description

Are you or someone you love suffering from endometriosis and associated symptoms? At Universal Sound Therapy we deal with all sorts of issues including endometriosis with our sound therapies. 

How?

Our therapy is based on frequencies, tuning your body to vibrate at the correct frequency is as important to your body healing itself or reducing symptoms you are facing.  Our healing sessions provide your body with the frequencies that would be found in a normal, healthy body. Your system absorbs these frequencies and makes the needed changes to “tune itself” and start to heal. Our bodies want to be healthy and when we provide them with the proper tools they will do everything needed to do just that.

Universal Sound Therapy is in the business to help your body heal and we are so confident that it will work for you that we offer you a 90-day money back guarantee. And if our endometriosis sound therapy CD doesn’t help, just return it for a full refund. Try to get that from your doctor or pharmacy.

Our Endometriosis sound therapy CD’s help by:

  • Decrease or minimize occurrences of blood in stool or urine, unusual or heavy bleeding during period, and severe menstrual cramps
  • Has the correct frequencies to help your body retune itself
  • Aligns and opens your Chakra system
  • Opens and cleans up your meridians
  • Helps your body heal itself

Short Description of Endometriosis

Endometriosis is a health condition that occurs when the endometrium, the tissue that normally lines the inside of a woman’s uterus, grows outside it. 

Symptoms of Endometriosis

You might not notice any symptoms. When you have them, they can include:

  • Back pain during your period
  • Severe menstrual cramps
  • Pain when pooping or peeing, especially during your period
  • Unusual or heavy bleeding during periods
  • Blood in your stool or urine
  • Diarrhea or constipation
  • Painful sex
  • Fatigue that won’t go away
  • Trouble getting pregnant

About Endometriosis 

Endometriosis is a painful medical disorder wherein tissue similar to the tissue that normally lines the inside of the woman’s uterus – the endometrium – grows outside of it. The condition most commonly involves the ovaries, fallopian tubes and the tissue lining the pelvis. Rarely, endometrial-like tissue may also be found beyond the area where the pelvic organs are located. 

For women with endometriosis, the endometrial-like tissue in the uterus behaves like a normal endometrial tissue would. It thickens, breaks down and bleeds with each menstrual cycle.  However, the tissue does not have any capacity to exit the body, it then becomes trapped in the uterus. When endometriosis involves the ovaries, cysts called endometriomas may begin to form.  The surrounding tissue can then become irritated eventually resulting to scar tissue and adhesions which are bands of fibrous tissue that result in pelvic tissues and organs to stick to one another.  Endometriosis is known to cause severe pain, especially during periods. Fertility issues can also develop. 

The primary symptom found in women suffering from endometriosis is pelvic pain that happens during the menstrual periods. While many experience cramps during menses, those suffering from endometriosis usually report a pain that is worse than usual. The pain may also increase over time. Women with endometriosis suffer from:

Painful periods – Pelvic pain and cramping that can begin prior to and extend several days into a menstrual period. There may also be some lower back and abdominal pain too. 

Pain during intercourse – Painful sex is common for women suffering from endometriosis. 

Pain with bowel movement or urination – Patients suffering from endometriosis is also most likely to experience this. 

Excessive bleeding – Women with endometriosis can experience heavy bleeding between periods.

Infertility – There are times that endometriosis is diagnosed when the patient is seeking treatment for infertility

Other signs and symptoms of endometriosis – Women can experience fatigue, diarrhea, constipation, bloating or nausea during periods. 

Endometriosis may sometimes be mistaken for other conditions that can result in pelvic pain like inflammatory disease or ovarian cysts. Endometriosis may also be confused with irritable bowel syndrome, a health condition that results in diarrhea, constipation and abdominal cramps.  Irritable bowel syndrome can also accompany endometriosis, which can complicate the diagnosis. 

Etiology of Endometriosis

While the exact cause of the endometriosis is not certain, possible causes include: 

  1. Retrograde menstruation – In retrograde menstruation, menstrual blood containing endometrial cells goes back through the fallopian tubes and into the pelvic cavity instead of out of the body.  The endometrial cells stick to the walls of the pelvis, surface of the organs, where they grow and continue to thicken and bleed over the course of each menstrual cycle. 
  2. Transformation of Peritoneal Cells – This is what is known as “induction theory.” Experts believe that hormones or immune factors promote transformation of peritoneal cells – cells that line the inner portion of the abdomen – into endometrial-like cells.
  3. Embryonic cell transformation – Estrogen may transform embryonic cells or cells in the earliest stages of development, into endometrial-like cell implants during puberty. 
  4. Surgical scar implantation — After major surgery like a C-section or hysterectomy, endometrial cells may attach to a surgical incision.
  5. Endometrial cell transport – Tissue fluid (lymphatic) or blood vessels may transport endometrial cells to the other parts of the body. 
  6. Immune System disorder – Issues with the immune system of the body may make it unable to recognize and kill endometrial-like tissue that is growing outside of the uterus. 

Risk Factors for Developing Endometriosis

There are several factors that place women to be at a higher risk for developing endometriosis:

  • Never giving birth
  • Starting your period at an early age
  • Going through menopause at an older age
  • Short cycles — for instance, less than 27 days
  • Heavy periods that last longer than seven days
  • Having higher levels of estrogen in your body or a greater lifetime exposure to estrogen your body produces
  • Low body mass index
  • One or more relatives (mother, aunt or sister) with endometriosis
  • Any medical condition that prevents the passage of blood from the body during menstrual periods
  • Disorders of the reproductive tract

Endometriosis usually occurs several years after menarche.  Signs and symptoms of the condition may temporarily abate with pregnancy and may completely disappear with menopause unless one is taking estrogen. 

Types of Endometriosis 

There are three main kinds of endometriosis based on its location:

  1. Superficial peritoneal lesion – This is the most common type.  There are lesions in the peritoneum, a thin film that lines the pelvic cavity. 
  2. Endometrioma – These pertains to dark, fluid-filled cysts, also called chocolate cysts that develop deep in the ovaries. They do not respond well to treatment and may harm healthy tissue. 
  3. Deep infiltrating endometriosis — this kind grows beneath the peritoneum and can involve organs near the uterus like the bladder or bowel. Approximately, 1% to 5% of women with the disease have it. 

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