Peter Attia· MD
The same actually. Yeah, very similarly. So pelvic pain, fever, uh usually they're they're both present together. Okay. And does it have the same pathology where it creates it ascends the fallopian tubes and scars the tubes?
The evidence is convergent. Multiple independent sources reach the same conclusion, the underlying mechanism is well-characterized, and even the field's most cautious voices treat it as worth doing.
The same actually. Yeah, very similarly. So pelvic pain, fever, uh usually they're they're both present together. Okay. And does it have the same pathology where it creates it ascends the fallopian tubes and scars the tubes?
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The same actually. Yeah. Very similarly. So, pelvic pain, fever, uh, usually they're they're both present together. Okay. And does it have the same pathology where it creates it ascends the fallopian tubes and scars the tubes? Yeah.
The ones most well understood are probably gorrhea and chlamydia, which are very common sexually transmitted diseases. And on the female side, those particular infections can ascend to the fallopian tubes and cause scarring in the fallopian tubes, which then interfere with that process that we talked about earlier, the egg and the sperm meeting and can lead to infertility.
How does it present in women usually with um pelvic pain, fever, vaginal discharge? Those are the most common symptoms.