1 / 62

Reproductive System Disorders

Reproductive System Disorders. Overview. Male Infertility Benign Prostatic Hypertrophy Prostate Cancer Female Infertility Endometriosis Pelvic Inflammatory Disease Ovarian Cysts Cancer Breast Cervical Uterine . Male Infertility. Can be solely male, solely female, or both

connor
Download Presentation

Reproductive System Disorders

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Reproductive System Disorders

  2. Overview • Male Infertility • Benign Prostatic Hypertrophy • Prostate Cancer • Female Infertility • Endometriosis • Pelvic Inflammatory Disease • Ovarian Cysts • Cancer • Breast • Cervical • Uterine

  3. Male Infertility • Can be solely male, solely female, or both • Considered infertile after one year of unprotected intercourse fails to produce a pregnancy • Male problems include • Changes is sperm or semen • Hormonal abnormalities • Pituitary disorders or testicular problems • Physical obstruction of sperm passageways • Congenital or scar tissue from injury • Semen analysis • Assess specific characteristics • Number, motility, normality

  4. Benign Prostatic Hypertrophy (BPH)—Pathophysiology • Common in older men; varies from mild to severe • Change is actually hyperplasia of prostate • Nodules form around urethra • Result of imbalance between estrogen and testosterone • No connection w/ prostate cancer • Rectal exams reveals enlarged gland • Incomplete emptying of bladder leads to infections • Continued obstruction leads to distended bladder, dilated ureters, renal damage • If significant, surgery required

  5. BPH—Signs and Symptoms • Initial signs • Obstruction of urine flow • Hesitancy, dribbling, decreased force of urine stream • Incomplete bladder emptying • Frequency, nocturia, recurrent UTIs

  6. BPH—Treatment • Only small amount require intervention • Surgery when obstruction severe • Drugs (Flomax) used to promote blood flow helpful when surgery not required

  7. Prostate Cancer • Common in men older than 50; ranks high as cause of cancer death • 3rd leading cause of death from cancer

  8. Prostate Cancer—Pathophysiology • Most are adenocarcinomas from tissue near surface of gland • BPH arises from center of gland • Many are androgen dependent • Tumors vary in degree of cellular differentiation • The more undifferentiated, the more aggressive and the faster they grow and spread • Metastasis to bone occurs early • Spine, pelvis, ribs, femur • Cancer has typically spread before diagnosis • Staging based on 4 categories: • A  small, nonpalpable, encapsulated • B  palpable confined to prostate • C  extended beyond prostate • D  presence of distant metastases

  9. Stages

  10. Prostate Cancer—Etiology • Cause not determined • Genetic, environmental, hormonal factors • Common in North American and northern Europe • Incidence higher in black population than white • Genetic factor? • Testosterone receptors found on cancer cells

  11. Prostate Cancer—Signs and Symptoms • Hard nodule in periphery of gland • Detected by rectal exam • No early urethral obstruction • b/c of location • As tumor develops, some obstruction occurs • Hesitancy, decreased stream, urinary frequency, bladder infection

  12. Prostate Cancer—Diagnostic Tests • 2 helpful serum markers • Prostate-specfic Antigen (PSA) • Useful screening tool for early detection • Prostatic acid phosphatase • elevated when metastatic cancer present • Ultrasound and biopsy confirms

  13. Prostate Cancer—Treatment • Surgery and radiation • Risk of impotence or incontinence • When tumor androgen sensitive: • orchiectomy (removal of testes) or • Antitestosterone drug therapy • 5 yr survival rate is 85-90%

  14. Female Infertility • Associated w/ hormonal imbalances • Result from altered function of hypothalamus, anterior pituitary, or ovaries • Typically after long use of birth control pill • Structural abnormalities • Small or bicornuate uterus • Obstruction of fallopian tubes • Scar tissue or endometriosis • Access of viable sperm • Change in vaginal pH • Due to infection or douches • Excessively thick cervical mucus • Development of antibodies in female to particular sperm • Smoking by male or female

  15. Female Infertility • Broad range of tests avail • General health status checked 1st • Pelvic examinations, ultrasound, CT scans check for structural abnormalities • Tubal insufflation (gas/pressure measurement) or hysterosalpingogram (X-ray w/ contrast material) used to check tubes • Blood tests throughout cycle to check hormone levels

  16. Normal Laparoscopy

  17. Endometriosis • Presence of endometrial tissue outside uterus (ectopic) • Found on ovaries, ligaments, colon, sometimes lungs • Responds to cyclic hormonal variations • Grows and secretes then degenerates, sheds and bleeds • What is the problem? (Where does it go?) • Blood irritating to tissues = inflammation and pain • Recurs w/ e/ cycle w/ eventual fibrous tissue • Causes adhesions and obstruction • Diagnosis confirmed w/ laparoscopy

  18. Endometriosis • Infertility results from • Adhesions pulling uterus out of normal position • Blockage of fallopian tubes • “chocolate cyst” develops on ovary • Fibrous sac containing old brown blood • Primary manifestations • Dysmenorrhea • More severe e/ month • Painful intercourse if vagina and supporting ligaments affected by adhesions

  19. Endometriosis • Cause not established • Migration of endometrial tissue up thru tubes to peritoneal cavity during menstruation, development from embryonic tissue at other sites, spread thru blood or lymph, transplantation during surgery (C-section) all possibilities • Treatment • Hormonal suppression of endometrial tissue • Surgical removal of endometrial tissue • Pregnancy and lactation delay further damage and alleviate symptoms

  20. Endometriosis

  21. Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) • Common infection of reproductive tract • Particularly fallopian tubes and ovaries • Includes: • Cervicitis (cervix) • Endometritis (uterus) • Salpingitis (fallopian tubes) • Oophoritis (ovaries) • Infection either cute or chronic • Short-term concerns: peritonitis, pelvic abscess • Long-term concerns: infertility, high risk of ectopic pregnancy

  22. PID—Pathophysiology • Usually originates as vaginitis or cervicitis • Often involves several causative bacteria • Uterus  fallopian tube • Edema, fills w/ purulent exudate • Obstructs tube and restricts drainage into uterus • Exudate drips out of fimbriae onto ovaries and surrounding tissue • Peritoneal membrane attempts to localize but peritonitis may develop • Abscesses may form; life-threatening • Cause septic shock • Adhesions affect tubes and ovaries • Lead to infertility and ectopic pregnancies

  23. PID

  24. PID—Etiology • Arise from sexually transmitted diseases • Gonorrhea • Chlamydiosis • Prior episodes of vaginitis or cervicitis precedes development • Infection acute during or after menses • Endometrium more vulnerable • Can also result from IUD or other contaminated instrument • Can perforate wall and lead to inflammation and infection

  25. PID—Signs and Symptoms • Lower abdominal pain (1st indication) • Sudden and severe or gradually increasing in intensity • Tenderness during pelvic exams • Purulent discharge at cervix • Dysuria • Fever and leukocytosis can occur • Depends on causative organism

  26. PID—Treatment • Aggressive antibiotics • Cefoxitin, doxycycline • Recurrent infections common • Sex partners should be treated as well • Follow-up appt to ensure eradication

  27. Benign Tumors: Ovarian Cysts • Variety of types • Follicular and corpus luteal cysts common • Develop unilaterally in both ruptured and unruptured follicles • Usually multiple fluid-filled sacs under serosa that covers ovary • May become large enough to cause discomfort, urinary retention, or menstrual irreg • Bleeding if ruptures • Cause even more serious inflammation • Risk of torsion of the ovary • Ultrasound and laparoscopy to ID cyst

  28. Ovarian Cysts

  29. Malignant Tumors: Carcinoma of the Breast—Pathophysiology • Develop in upper outer quadrant of breast in ½ of the cases • Central portion of the breast is also common • Most tumors are unilateral • Different types; majority arise from ductal epithelium • Infiltrates surrounding tissue and adheres to skin • Causes dimpling • Tumor becomes fixed when adheres to muscle or fascia of chest wall

  30. Carcinoma of the Breast—Pathophysiology • Malignant cells spread at early state • 1st to close lymph nodes • Axillary nodes • In most cases, several nodes infected at time of diagnosis • metastasizes quickly to lungs, brain, bone, liver • Tumor cells graded on basis of degree of differentiation or anaplasia • Tumor then staged based on size of primary tumor, # lymph nodes, presence of metastases • Presence of estrogen and progesterone receptors • Major factor in determining how to treat the pt’s cancer

  31. Breast Cancer

  32. Breast Cancer—Etiology • Major cause of death in women • Incidence continues to increase after age of 20 • Strong genetic predisposition • identification of specific genes related to cancer • Hormones also a factor • Specifically exposure to high estrogen levels • Long period of regular menstrual cycles (early menarche to late menopause) • No kids (nulliparily) • Delay of 1st pregnancy • Role of exogenous estrogen (birth control pills, supplements) still controversial

  33. Breast Cancer—Signs and Symptoms • Initial sign is single, hard, painless nodule • Mass is freely movable in early stage • Becomes fixed • Advanced signs • Fixed nodule • Dimpling of skin • Discharge from nipple • Change in breast contour • Biopsy confirms diagnosis of malignancy

  34. Breast Cancer—Treatment • Surgery, radiation, chemo • Surgery • Lumpectomy • Preferred; removal of tumor • Mastectomy • Sometimes necessary • Some lymph nodes removed as well • # removed depends on the spread of the tumor cells • Impairs draining of lymph; swelling and stiffness of arm common • Chemo and radiation • Useful for eradicating undetected micrometastases

  35. Breast Cancer—Treatment • If responsive to hormones, removal of hormone stimulation • Premenopausal women: ovaries removed • Postmenopausal women: hormone-blocking agent • Prognosis • Relatively good if nodes not involved • As # nodes increases, prognosis becomes more negative • May recur years later • Longer the period w/o recurrence, better the chances • BSE if over 20 yrs. • Mammography routine screening tool • Detect lesions before they become palpable or if they are deep in the breast tissue

  36. Carcinoma of the Cervix • # deaths has decreased due to Pap smear • Screening and early diagnosis while cancer in situ • However, # cases of carcinoma in situ has increased in the US • Avg age of in situ onset is 35 • Invasive carcinoma manifests at 45 • Age range dropping to younger women

  37. Cervical Cancer—Pathophysiology • Early changes in cervical epithelial tissue consist of dysplasia • Mild then becomes severe (takes 10 yrs) • Occurs at junction of columnar cells and squamous cells of external os of cervix • Cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) graded from I to III • Based on amount of dysplasia and cell differentiation • Grade III • Carcinoma in situ • Many disorganized, undifferentiated, abnormal cells present (severe dysplasia) • Takes 10 yrs from mild to carcinoma in situ so plenty of chances to detect

  38. Cervical Cancer—Pathophysiology • Carcinoma in situ is noninvasive stage • Leads to invasive stage • Invasive has varying characteristics • Protruding nodular mass or ulceration • Eventually all characteristics present in the lesion • Carcinoma spreads in all directions • Adjacent tissues (uterus and vagina); bladder, rectum, ligaments • Metastases to lymph nodes occur rarely or in late stage • Staging: • 0: carcinoma in situ • I: cancer restricted to cervix • II to IV: further spread to surrounding tissues

More Related