Abstract

The introduction of an intrauterine device into the uterine cavity induces a foreign body reaction in the surrounding endometrium which is characterized by the infiltration of polymorphonuclear leucocytes and macrophages into the endometrial stroma and subsequently through the surface epithelium. Leucocyte migration is greater with copper IUDs than with inert IUDs. Ulceration of the surface epithelium, haemorrhage of erythrocytes and microthrombosis of stomach capillaries occur in the functional endometrium in contact with inert and copper IUDs. In endometrium adjacent to, but not in contact with, the IUD gaps appear in the endothelial lining of small blood vessels without a haemostatic response. The most striking response in endometrium exposed to progesterone-releasing IUDs is the occurrence of dilated, thin-walled vesicles, associated with a thinning of the surface epithelium and a decidual reaction in the stroma. A uniform suppression of the endometrium in progesterone IUD users is always found after six months of treatment, whereas the insertion of IUDs releasing 20–30 ug levonorgestrel induce a profound uniform suppression of the functional endometrium throughout the uterus after only four weeks.

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