Hysterosalpingogram shows the endometrial cavity to be small with an irregular contour. Multiple irregular filling defects are seen within the cavity. Few serpiginous lucencies in the endometrial cavity represent endometrial debris. Both Fallopian tubes are faintly opacified and are occluded at the ampullary region. There is no peritoneal spill of contrast on either side.
Asherman's syndrome is named after Joseph Asherman, an Israeli gynecologist who first described the condition in the 1940s, though it was first noted by Heinrich Fritsch (1844 – 1915) a German gynecologist and obstetrician