Sky Sports Presentator Anna Woolhouse shared a health update After subjecting his other laparoscopic surgery for endometriosis.
Sharing Selfie from the hospital bed on Wednesday (2. April), 41-year-old TV stars said that the week was “pretty wild ride”.
She wrote: “Last week I had my second laparoscopic surgery for endometriosis in 7 years, he made a surgeon that controlled the robot that smokes.” It ended up a slight chunkier op than I eventually negotiated, but all right. “
Laparoscopy is the type of surgical procedure that allows the surgeon to access the abdomen through key operation, the type of minimal invasive surgery. The procedure is sometimes used to enable doctors to reduce or remove endometriosis tissue as a form of treatment.
Wooushouse, who has Sky Sky’s coverage, because she joined the Channel 2012, said that he wanted to mark the month of awareness of endometriosis, which he finished on Monday, to “shine the situation that is still unknown or not about almost enough.”
She explained that the condition is affected by one of 10 women, according to the charity endometriosisisisisisis, and that the process of obtaining a diagnosis is often “long, emotional and a painful process and can be incredibly weakened for life.”
The second slider was a picture of Woolhouse’s grandmother covered with bloody bandages, and in the other slide, the picture shared Married at first sight Australia game on his ipad from his hospital bed.
Woolhouse is diagnosed with endometriosis in 2017. years after the “endless GP meeting”.
She said, “I had the first surgery in 2018. years, and in a few years, my symptoms have improved and in recent years have resulted in some cordial shocks and in the end that it would really hope that it would be,” she said.
She continued to thank “great” staff in Hromwell Hospital in London, adding, “And thank God at MAFs on my Ipad (not judge!)”
Woolhouse added that they will focus on vacation and taking a stable walk outside.
“Maybe” out of the game “for a few weeks, but I’ll be back carrying odd socks and coaches in an instant,” the post concluded.
Endometriosis is where cells similar to those in the uterine lining grow in other parts of the body, such as ovaries, thieves and a bowl cover.

According to the NHS, sometimes it can affect organs, such as the bladder and hose. It is rarely located in areas outside the pelvis, such as chest.
Symptoms occur when the endometriosis patches break and bleeds during your period, but cannot leave the body, including heavy pain, heavy periods, a toilet, extreme fatigue and pain or bleeding in other areas.
There is difficulty diagnosing endometriosis because symptoms can be similar to other conditions such as adenomommios, when the uterine plant starts to grow in muscle, fibroids, pelvic inflammatory diseases and cutting bowels.