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Asherman’s Syndrome Treatment in Goregaon West, Mumbai: Uterine Scarring, Scanty Periods & Fertility Care

Author:

Dr. Dimple Doshi (MBBS, MD, DGO)
Lady Gynecologist & Laparoscopic Surgeon
27+ years’ experience
20,000+ surgeries completed

Periods becoming very light or absent after D&C, miscarriage treatment, abortion care, delivery-related curettage, or uterine surgery can feel confusing and stressful.
Many women worry whether uterine scarring may affect fertility, pregnancy chances, or future periods.
In my clinical experience, Asherman’s syndrome needs careful diagnosis, fertility-sensitive counselling, and uterus-preserving treatment when appropriate.
This guide explains symptoms, causes, diagnosis, hysteroscopic adhesiolysis, recovery, recurrence prevention, and when to consult a gynecologist.

What Is Asherman’s Syndrome?

Asherman’s syndrome is scar tissue inside the uterus that may reduce menstrual flow, disturb the uterine cavity, and affect fertility.

In a healthy uterus, the inner lining, called the endometrium, grows and sheds every month.

In Asherman’s syndrome:

  • Scar tissue forms inside the uterine cavity.
  • The uterine walls may partially stick together.
  • The endometrial lining may not grow normally.
  • Menstrual flow may become very scanty.
  • Implantation may become difficult in some women.

Asherman’s syndrome is also called:

  • intrauterine adhesions
  • intrauterine synechiae
  • uterine scarring
  • uterine cavity adhesions
  • scar tissue in the uterus

It may happen after D&C, miscarriage treatment, delivery-related curettage, abortion procedure, infection, or uterine surgery.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
If your periods became suddenly very light after a uterine procedure, please do not ignore it. A proper evaluation can help identify whether uterine adhesions are present.

Asherman’s syndrome is medically known as intrauterine adhesions, uterine cavity scarring, or intrauterine synechiae.

Patients may search for this condition using many different terms, such as:

  • Asherman syndrome
  • Asherman’s syndrome
  • Intrauterine adhesions
  • IUAs
  • Uterine adhesions
  • Uterine scarring
  • Scar tissue in uterus
  • Intrauterine synechiae
  • Endometrial scarring
  • Uterine cavity adhesions
  • Adhesions after D&C
  • Adhesions after miscarriage
  • Adhesions after abortion procedure
  • Hysteroscopic adhesiolysis
  • Uterine scar removal surgery

These terms usually refer to scar tissue forming inside the uterine cavity.

Asherman’s syndrome usually develops after trauma to the uterine lining, especially after pregnancy-related curettage or infection.

The most common background is uterine instrumentation, especially when the uterine lining is delicate after pregnancy.

Common causes include:

  • D&C after miscarriage
  • D&C after delivery-related retained products
  • Repeated uterine curettage
  • Surgical evacuation after abortion
  • Infection inside the uterus
  • Tuberculosis of the genital tract
  • Previous uterine surgery
  • Septum surgery or fibroid surgery in selected cases
  • Severe endometrial inflammation

Risk may be higher when uterine procedures are repeated, done after pregnancy, or performed in the presence of infection or retained products.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Not every D&C causes Asherman’s syndrome. But if periods reduce significantly after D&C or miscarriage treatment, uterine scarring should be considered.

Common symptoms include scanty periods, absent periods, pelvic pain, infertility, recurrent miscarriage, or failed implantation.

Some women have mild symptoms.

Others notice a clear change after a uterine procedure.

You should suspect Asherman’s syndrome if you have:

  • Periods becoming suddenly very light
  • No periods after D&C or miscarriage treatment
  • Cyclical pain but very little bleeding
  • Difficulty conceiving after previous pregnancy procedure
  • Recurrent pregnancy loss
  • Repeated IVF implantation failure
  • History of retained products followed by curettage
  • Reduced menstrual flow after uterine infection

Important clinical clue

If a woman had normal periods earlier and then develops markedly reduced bleeding after D&C, intrauterine adhesions should be considered.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
A sudden change from normal flow to very scanty flow after a uterine procedure is an important symptom. Please bring your old procedure records if available.

Yes. Some women may feel cyclic pelvic pain when menstrual blood is trapped or the uterine cavity is partly blocked by adhesions.

Pain may happen when the endometrium tries to shed, but scar tissue blocks normal menstrual flow.

Women may describe:

  • monthly cramps but little bleeding
  • pelvic heaviness
  • lower abdominal pain around expected period date
  • pain with absent periods
  • worsening cramps after a previous uterine procedure

Pain is not present in every patient.

But cyclic pain with reduced or absent bleeding needs evaluation.

Uterine adhesions may affect fertility by reducing healthy endometrial surface, disturbing implantation, or increasing miscarriage risk.

Pregnancy needs:

  • A healthy uterine cavity
  • Adequate endometrial lining
  • Normal cavity shape
  • Good blood supply
  • A receptive implantation surface

In Asherman’s syndrome, scar tissue can interfere with one or more of these factors.

Fertility-related concerns include:

  • Difficulty in conceiving
  • Thin endometrium
  • Failed implantation
  • Recurrent miscarriage
  • Abnormal placentation in future pregnancy
  • Preterm birth risk in some cases

The fertility outcome depends on:

  • severity of adhesions
  • amount of healthy endometrium remaining
  • age
  • ovarian reserve
  • partner factors
  • previous pregnancy history
  • response after adhesiolysis

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Asherman’s syndrome is a uterine cavity problem. Fertility planning should include the uterus, endometrium, ovulation, tubes, ovarian reserve, and partner semen report.

Diagnosis is usually made by hysteroscopy, supported by ultrasound, saline sonography, or fertility-focused evaluation when needed.

Evaluation may include:

  • Detailed menstrual history
  • History of D&C, miscarriage, abortion, delivery, infection, or surgery
  • Pelvic examination
  • Transvaginal ultrasound
  • Saline infusion sonography
  • Hysterosalpingography in selected infertility cases
  • Diagnostic hysteroscopy
  • Endometrial assessment
  • Tuberculosis evaluation if clinically suspected

Why hysteroscopy is important

Hysteroscopy allows direct visualization of the uterine cavity.

It helps assess:

  • Location of adhesions
  • Severity of adhesions
  • Whether the cavity is partially or completely blocked
  • Whether tubal openings are visible
  • Endometrial quality
  • Possibility of safe adhesiolysis

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Hysteroscopy is useful because it allows us to see the scar tissue directly and decide whether treatment can be done safely.

The main treatment is hysteroscopic adhesiolysis, where adhesions are carefully released under direct vision.

Treatment depends on:

  • Severity of adhesions
  • Menstrual symptoms
  • Fertility desire
  • Previous pregnancy history
  • Endometrial thickness
  • Tuberculosis or infection history
  • Age and ovarian reserve
  • IVF or natural conception plan

Treatment options may include:

1. Observation in mild cases

If adhesions are mild and symptoms are minimal, careful observation may be appropriate.

2. Hysteroscopic adhesiolysis

This is the standard surgical treatment when adhesions affect periods, fertility, or uterine cavity shape.

3. Hormonal support after surgery

Estrogen-progesterone therapy may be advised in selected cases to support endometrial healing.

4. Anti-adhesion strategies

A balloon, intrauterine device, or barrier gel may be considered depending on the case and surgeon preference.

5. Repeat hysteroscopy

Some patients need a second-look hysteroscopy because adhesions can recur.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Treatment should be fertility-sensitive and gentle. The goal is to restore the uterine cavity as safely as possible without causing further injury.

Hysteroscopic adhesiolysis releases uterine scar tissue using a camera-guided approach without abdominal cuts.

This is a uterus-preserving procedure.

Before surgery

You may need:

  • Consultation and history review
  • Ultrasound evaluation
  • Fertility discussion if pregnancy is desired
  • Infection screening where indicated
  • Anesthesia fitness
  • Blood tests
  • Counselling about realistic outcomes

During the procedure

  • A hysteroscope is passed through the cervix.
  • The uterine cavity is seen on a monitor.
  • Adhesions are gently identified.
  • Scar bands are released carefully.
  • The cavity shape is restored as much as safely possible.
  • Tubal openings are checked if visible.
  • Anti-adhesion measures may be used.

After surgery

  • You may go home the same day or after short observation.
  • Mild cramps and spotting can happen.
  • Medicines may be given to support healing.
  • Follow-up is important to assess menstrual response.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Hysteroscopic adhesiolysis is done through the natural vaginal route, without abdominal cuts, but the procedure still needs skill, care, and proper follow-up.

Recurrence prevention may need gentle surgery, hormonal support, cavity separation methods, infection control, and planned follow-up.

Adhesion recurrence is one of the main challenges in Asherman’s syndrome.

Prevention strategies may include:

  • Gentle surgical technique
  • Avoiding blind aggressive curettage
  • Using hysteroscopic guidance when possible
  • Treating infection or genital TB if present
  • Estrogen therapy in selected patients
  • Intrauterine balloon or barrier in selected cases
  • Second-look hysteroscopy
  • Close menstrual follow-up

There is no single recurrence-prevention method that works for every patient.

The plan is individualized according to severity and fertility goals.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Follow-up is as important as the surgery. Adhesions can recur, especially in moderate or severe cases, so menstrual response and cavity healing should be monitored.

Most women recover physically within a few days, but menstrual and fertility response may need weeks to months of follow-up.

Time After Procedure

What You May Expect

Same day

Mild cramps, spotting, observation

1–3 days

Resume light routine if comfortable

1–2 weeks

Follow-up visit if advised

4–6 weeks

First menstrual response may be assessed

6–12 weeks

Endometrial healing and cycle pattern reviewed

2–3 months

Fertility planning may begin if cavity is satisfactory

Later

Second-look hysteroscopy may be advised in moderate or severe cases

Red flags after procedure

Contact your doctor urgently if you develop:

  • Heavy bleeding
  • Fever
  • Severe pelvic pain
  • Foul-smelling discharge
  • Dizziness or fainting
  • Persistent worsening cramps

Asherman treatment is usually safe in expert hands, but uterine perforation, bleeding, infection, or recurrence can occur.

Possible risks include:

  • Bleeding
  • Infection
  • Uterine perforation
  • Fluid overload, rarely
  • Incomplete adhesiolysis
  • Recurrence of adhesions
  • Thin endometrium despite treatment
  • Need for repeat procedure
  • Pregnancy complications in future pregnancies

Important counselling point

Severe Asherman’s syndrome may not always be fully reversible.

The goal is to improve:

  • Uterine cavity shape
  • Menstrual flow
  • Endometrial function
  • Fertility potential
  • Pregnancy safety planning

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Mild and moderate adhesions often respond better than severe adhesions. Honest counselling helps set realistic expectations before treatment.

You should consult if your periods became scanty or absent after D&C, miscarriage treatment, delivery procedure, or uterine surgery.

Book a consultation if you have:

  • Very scanty periods after D&C
  • No periods after miscarriage evacuation
  • Infertility after uterine procedure
  • Recurrent miscarriage
  • Thin endometrium on ultrasound
  • Failed embryo transfer
  • Cyclical pain with little bleeding
  • Suspected uterine cavity scarring
  • Previous genital tuberculosis

Concerned about scanty periods, infertility, or uterine scarring after D&C?
Do not ignore sudden menstrual changes after a uterine procedure.
Consult Dr. Dimple Doshi at Vardaan Hospital, Goregaon West, Mumbai for detailed evaluation.

Dr. Dimple Doshi offers ethical, fertility-sensitive, and uterus-preserving gynecological care in Goregaon West, Mumbai.

At Vardaan Hospital, the focus is on:

  • Correct diagnosis before treatment
  • Avoiding unnecessary procedures
  • Clear counselling
  • Fertility-sensitive planning
  • Uterus-preserving approach
  • Safe operative care
  • Post-treatment follow-up
  • Honest discussion of success and limitations

Dr. Dimple Doshi is a gynecologist, obstetrician, and laparoscopic surgeon with 27+ years of experience and extensive surgical expertise in women’s health conditions.

Vardaan Hospital provides accessible, patient-friendly gynecology care with surgical safety, privacy, and supportive follow-up.

Patient benefits include:

  • Located in Goregaon West, Mumbai
  • Convenient access for patients from Mumbai western suburbs
  • Gynecology-focused care
  • Supportive nursing team
  • Surgical and maternity experience
  • Patient privacy and comfort
  • Clear preoperative and postoperative guidance

Vardaan Hospital is accessible for patients from Goregaon West, Malad, Jogeshwari, Kandivali, Andheri, and nearby Mumbai suburbs.

Cost depends on diagnostic tests, severity of adhesions, anesthesia, hysteroscopic procedure type, and hospital stay requirements.

The cost may vary depending on:

  • Diagnostic hysteroscopy only vs operative hysteroscopy
  • Mild, moderate, or severe adhesions
  • Need for ultrasound guidance
  • Need for second-look hysteroscopy
  • Medication after surgery
  • Fertility planning requirements
  • Hospital and anesthesia charges

For exact cost guidance, consultation and report review are required.

Asherman’s syndrome is treatable in many women, but diagnosis, severity assessment, fertility planning, and follow-up are very important.

The most important points are:

  • It means scar tissue inside the uterus.
  • It may occur after D&C, miscarriage treatment, abortion care, delivery curettage, infection, or uterine surgery.
  • Scanty periods after D&C are an important clue.
  • It may affect fertility and pregnancy outcomes.
  • Hysteroscopy is the key diagnostic test.
  • Hysteroscopic adhesiolysis is the main treatment when indicated.
  • Adhesions can recur, so follow-up is important.
  • Severe cases may not be fully reversible.
  • Treatment should be uterus-preserving and fertility-sensitive.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Please do not lose hope, but please do not delay evaluation either. The earlier we understand the severity, the better we can plan treatment and fertility care.

Q1. Can Asherman’s syndrome cause infertility?

Ans. Yes. Asherman’s syndrome can cause infertility if adhesions disturb the uterine cavity or reduce healthy endometrial lining.

It may affect implantation, menstrual flow, and pregnancy continuation. Fertility outcome depends on severity, endometrial health, age, ovarian reserve, and treatment response.

Q2. Can periods become normal after Asherman’s syndrome treatment?

Ans. Periods may improve after adhesiolysis, especially when healthy endometrium remains and adhesions are not very severe.

Mild to moderate adhesions often respond better than severe disease. Some women may need repeat treatment.

Q3. Is hysteroscopy painful?

Ans. Diagnostic or operative hysteroscopy is usually done with appropriate anesthesia or pain control, so discomfort is minimized.

Some women may feel mild cramps after the procedure.

Q4. Can Asherman’s syndrome come back after surgery?

Ans. Yes. Adhesions can recur, especially in moderate or severe cases, so follow-up is very important.

Your doctor may advise medicines, cavity protection methods, or second-look hysteroscopy depending on your case.

Q5. Can I conceive naturally after Asherman’s syndrome treatment?

Ans. Some women can conceive naturally after successful treatment, but others may need fertility support depending on age and ovarian reserve.

A fertility plan should be individualized.

Q6. Is Asherman’s syndrome common after every D&C?

Ans. No. Most women do not develop Asherman’s syndrome after D&C, but risk increases with repeated or pregnancy-related curettage.

Risk is higher when the uterine lining is already inflamed, infected, or recently pregnant.

Q7. What is the best test for Asherman’s syndrome?

Ans. Hysteroscopy is considered the most direct test because it allows the doctor to see adhesions inside the uterus.

Ultrasound and saline sonography can support diagnosis but may not fully define adhesions in all cases.

Conclusion

Asherman’s syndrome can be emotionally stressful because it may affect periods, fertility, implantation, and pregnancy confidence.
It often becomes a concern when periods become very scanty or absent after D&C, miscarriage treatment, abortion procedure, delivery-related curettage, infection, or uterine surgery.

In my clinical experience, women feel more reassured when they understand that Asherman’s syndrome is not just a “period problem” — it is a uterine cavity condition that needs proper diagnosis and fertility-sensitive treatment.

At Vardaan Hospital, Goregaon West, Mumbai, Dr. Dimple Doshi provides evaluation for scanty periods after D&C, suspected intrauterine adhesions, infertility after uterine procedures, recurrent miscarriage, thin endometrium, and hysteroscopic adhesiolysis planning when appropriate.

Concerned about scanty periods, infertility, or uterine scarring after D&C?
Book a consultation with Dr. Dimple Doshi at Vardaan Hospital, Goregaon West, Mumbai for detailed evaluation and uterus-preserving care.

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