One of the first steps in the pathogenesis of endometriosis is the attachment of the endometrium to the peritoneal lining. Since the peritoneum is extremely fragile and hard to obtain, amnion has been used as an in-vitro model to study adhesion. Scanning and transmission electron microscopy was applied to evaluate the adhesion of endometrial cells isolated in the proliferative and secretory phases of the menstrual cycle. Endometrial fragments obtained in either phase of the cycle were able to adhere to the extracellular matrix of the amnion. Fragments from proliferative phase endometrium showed active spreading and growth over the matrix surface, whereas fragments from secretory phase endometrium did not. Fragments from proliferative as well as secretory phase endometrium were able to adhere to the epithelial side of the amnion, but only at locations where the amniotic epithelium was damaged or partly absent. These observations indicate that the basement membrane and extracellular matrix provide a suitable substrate for endometrial cell attachment and growth and that endometrial cell adhesion occurs preferentially to subepithelial structures, whereas an intact epithelium prevents the adhesion of endometrial fragments to the amnion.

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