My mother's adhesions stopped being a problem in her middle fifties. She had probably as many adhesion surgeries as I've had; at least one every two years on average. I'm just hoping the same thing will happen to me . . . that somewhere along the way these damn things will stop growing. Caryn
>----- Original Message -----
From: "Katie" <katie_scarlett67@hotmail.com>
To: "Multiple recipients of list ADHESIONS" <adhesions@mail.obgyn.net>
Sent: Tuesday, March 3, 2009 10:58:10 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
Subject: (For Caryn R.) How do adhesions grow
Caryn, Â does that mean that your mother is finally well?
Katie
At Tue, 3 Mar 2009, carynlruzich@comcast.net wrote:
>
>I believe that is the biggest question medical science
has yet to answer. If they that, they'd probably have
a solution.
>
>It is known to be an inflammatory response. Normally
that response does get turned off. In people with adhesions,
 it does not. I believe something in us feeds their growth.�
� My mother also suffered terribly from adhesions and
had countless sugeries for adhesion removal, just like me.Â
However, her last surgery was when she was in her 50's.Â
I have often wondered what changed to make them stop? One
thought was hormones, but my mother had a complete hysterectomy
when she was in her late 30's. Makes me wonder still.
>
>Caryn R
>
>>>----- Original Message -----
>From: Natrlady21@aol.com
>To: "Multiple recipients of list ADHESIONS" <adhesions@mail.obgyn.net>
>Sent: Thursday, February 26, 2009 7:54:25 AM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
>Subject: Re: ?How do adhesions grow?
>
>Does anyone know what makes existing adhesions continue to grow (spread)? By doin certain activities etc. Are there professional articles that talk about this?
>
>Thanks,
>Karen
>
>2F%2Fwww.freecreditreport.com%2Fpm%2Fdefault.aspx%3Fsc%3D668072%26hmpgID%3D62%26bcd%3DfebemailfooterNO62)
tm htm