1 / 10

Abnormal excessive uterine bleeding

Abnormal excessive uterine bleeding. Prof Lindeque. Everybody bleeds. Excessive bleeding is common Treatment may have varied success A mother and daughter issue - sometimes people expect the worst Few people like menstruation to begin with. Modern definitions.

donat
Download Presentation

Abnormal excessive uterine bleeding

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. Abnormal excessive uterine bleeding • Prof Lindeque

  2. Everybody bleeds... • Excessive bleeding is common • Treatment may have varied success • A mother and daughter issue - sometimes people expect the worst • Few people like menstruation to begin with

  3. Modern definitions • Group name: heavy menstrual bleeding • Cyclic excessive bleeding: • Short cycle; n volume; polimennorrhoea • Bleeds more days than normal: hypermenorrhoea • More volume, more days: menorrhagia • Acyclic bleeding: metrorrhagia • Acyclic excessive bleeding: menometrorrhagia

  4. Types of AEUB • 1 Organic causes: • Pathology detected on examination (list follows) • 2 DUB: dysfunctional uterine bleeding • Healthy woman, no pathology, n examination • Whether she ovulates (1/3) or is anovulatory (2/3)

  5. Age does matter • Adolescents: • >80% dysfunctional, anovulatory DUB: • Unripe HT-pit-ovar axis: produces Estrogen, not Progesterone • An- or oligomenorrhoea or otherwise disorderly cycle • <20% have pathology: bleeding disorders (ITP, Von Willebrandt, leukemia, HIV platelet dysfunction) • Have to do: clinical exam incl. PR, FBC, platelets, HIV • Management: HORMONAL: best is OC pill

  6. Reproductive years: 20-45 • Biggest groups: organic pathology; pregnancy ox • Gynae pathology: fibroids, adenomiosis, endometrial hyperplasia, polyps, some ovarian or uterine tumours, few cervical lesions, endometriosis, PID, pregnancy, cx of miscarriages, molar pregnancy, ectopic, secondary PPH • Systemic disorders: bleeding disorders, thyroid dysfunction, systemic disease,medication, hyperprolactinaemia

  7. Reproductive years • Anovulatory DUB: common: oligo- or anovulation due to stress, PCOS, weight changes, exercise • Ovulatory DUB: less common: [short luteal phase with cycle every 2-3 wks]; [persistent corpus luteum (postponed bleeding then massive bleeding)]

  8. Reproductive years Management • Medical: • Document bleeding • Mirena progestogen containing IUCD (NICE no 1) • Cyclokapron (60% reduction, NICE no2), OC 40% reduction (NICE no 3), NSAIDS 40% reduction • Surgical: completed families, failed medication • Endometrial destruction: ablation, resection: 50% amenorrhoea over 5 years (better initially) • Hysterectomy: 100% amenorrhoea rate

  9. Perimenopausal: 45-55+/- • Important: organic lesions: must exclude malignancies and pregnancy cx • Most common: anovulation (tired ovaries) • Management: clinical examination • Tests: cervical smears, endometrial biopsy, endometrial ultrasound, pregnancy test • Management: Mirena, E+P hormone Rx, NSAID; surgical: hysterectomy

  10. So: approach to a patient with AEUB • Hx: menarche, menses as adolescent, describe bleeding: volume, clots; pain,contraception. Obstetric, medical, surgical, medication • Examination: general,thyroid, breasts, systems, gynae in detail, decide: organic causes or FUB • Tests FBC, pregnancy, cytology, TSH, PRL, endometrial assessment • Treatment: according to etiological diagnosis

More Related