1 research outputs found
Stem cells: Are they the answer to the puzzling etiology of endometriosis?
Endometriosis is a chronic bening disease characterizaed by the presence of abnormally located tissue resembling the endometrium with glands and
stroma. This disease has a high degree of morbidity due
to chronic pelvic pain and infertility. The disease is
likely to be polygenic and multifactorial, but the exact
pathogenic mechanisms are still not entirely clear.
Recently, adult stem cells have been identified in several
tissues, including the endometrium. These cells are
probably involved in the regenerative ability of the
endometrial cycle, and also in the pathogenesis of
proliferative gynaecological diseases, such as
endometriosis. The identification of stem cells in animal
and human tissues is very complex and the putative stem
cells are supposed to be found through several assays
such as clonogenicity, label-retaining cells, “side-
population” cells, undifferentiation markers, and cellular
differentiation. Bone marrow-derived stem cells
transplanted into humans and animals have also been
identified in eutopic endometrium and endometriotic
implants. This review evaluates the available evidence
regarding stem/progenitor cells in the human
endometrium and explores the possible involvement of
these cells in the etiology of endometriosis