1 / 29

Menstrual Disorders

Menstrual Disorders. Oguchi A. Nwosu M.D. Assistant Profressor Emory Family Medicine Dept. 6/28/07. Menstrual Cycle. Definitions. Menorrhagia Excessive (>80ml) uterine bleeding Prolonged (>7days) regular DUB Abnormal Bleeding, no obvious organic cause usually anovulatory

maida
Download Presentation

Menstrual 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. Menstrual Disorders Oguchi A. Nwosu M.D. Assistant Profressor Emory Family Medicine Dept. 6/28/07

  2. Menstrual Cycle

  3. Definitions • Menorrhagia Excessive (>80ml) uterine bleeding Prolonged (>7days) regular • DUB Abnormal Bleeding, no obvious organic cause usually anovulatory • Oligomenorrhea Uterine bleeding occurring at intervals between 35 days and 6 months • Amenorrhea No menses x at least 6 months Metrorragia, Menometrorrhagia, Polymenorrhea

  4. Ovulatory vs Anovulatory cycles • Anovulatory Oligo or Amenorrhea +/- Menorrhagia • Ovulatory Regular menstrual cycles (plus premenstrual symptoms such as dysmenorrhea and mastalgia

  5. DUB -Defn: Excessively heavy, prolonged or frequent bleeding of uterine origin that is not due to pregnancy, pelvic or systemic disease -Diagnosis of exclusion - Anovulatory -Usually extremes of reproductive life and in pts with PCOS

  6. DUB pathophysiology • Disturbance in the HPO axis thus changes in length of menstrual cycle • No progesterone withdrawal from an estrogen-primed endometrium • Endometrium builds up with erratic bleeding as it breaks down.

  7. 16year old with daily heavy vaginal bleeding with clots, no cramps • 5ft 7in, 105ibs, normal sec. sex xristics, pelvic normal • Menarche 14, 2 periods last year, heavy lasts 2 weeks, virginal. • I month hx of daily heavy vag bleeding with clots, 8 to 10 pads x day • No associated symptoms • Picture of teenager

  8. DUB management • HCG, CBC, TSH • ? Coagulation workup • Ensure pap smear UTD if appropriate • >35 or Ca risk factors, tamoxifen use – sample endometrium

  9. DUB management • I/V or I/M conjugated estrogen therapy acute DUB--How ?!!!. Usually followed by OCP or progestin • Cyclic progestins for 10 to 12 days each cycle, consider mirena IUD • OCP • D and C – old school, no longer recommended.

  10. Menorrhagia -Heavy vaginal bleeding that is not DUB -Usually secondary to distortion of uterine cavity- heavy with or without prolongation (anatomic). Uterus unable to contract down on open venous sinuses in the zona basalis -Other causes organic, endocrinologic, hemostatic and iatrogenic -Usually ovulatory

  11. 5ft’5”, 155Ibs, husband ‘castrated’ Had normal 28 day cycles lasting 5 days Last 1 year or so very heavy periods with clots and occ. ‘flooding’ in the first 3 days with need to use >8pads/day fully soaked, spots for up to 1 week after this. Dysmenorrhea, severe, aching pain lower legs Normal recent pap 40 year old with menorrhagia x 12 months • Picture of middle aged woman

  12. Menorrhagia, Management • History • Physical exam-anemia, obesity, androgen excess e.g. hirsuitism, acne, ecchymosis/purpura, thyroid, galactorrhea, liver/spleen, Pelvic- Uterine, cervical and adnexal

  13. Menorrhagia, management • HCG, CBC, TSH • ? Coagulation workup • Ensure pap smear UTD if appropriate • >35 or Ca risk factors, tamoxifen use sample endometrium Other tests as INDICATED by HX and PE

  14. Endometrial evaluation of menorrhagia

  15. Menorrhagia, medical management • NSAID’s, 1st line, 5 days, decrease prostaglandins • Danazol, Androgen and prog. competitor , amenorrhea in 4-6 weeks, androgenic side effects • OCP’s, esp. if contraception desired, up to 60% dec. supp. HP axis • Continous OCP’s • Oral continous progestins (day 5 to 26), most prescribed, antiestrogen, downregulates endormetrium • Levonorgestrel IUD (Mirena), High satisfaction rate that approaches surgical techniques • GnRH agonists, Inhibit FSH and LH release– hypogonadism, bone • Conjugated estrogens for acute bleeding • Other treatments as indicated e.g. DDAVP for coagulation defects

  16. Menorrhagia, surgical management

  17. Menorrhagia, Surgical Management

  18. Menorrhagia, management summary • Tailor treatment to individual patient. • Consider patients age, coexisting medical diseases, FH, desire for fertility, cost of rx and adverse effects • Surgical management reserved for organic causes (e.g fibroids) or when medical management fails to alleviate symptoms

  19. Amenorrhea, physiologic causes • Male gender • Prepubertal female • Pregnant female • Postmenopausal female

  20. Primary Amenorrhea • Absence of menses by age 14 with absence of SSC (e.g. breast development) or absence by age 16 with normal SSC • Only 3 conditions unique to primary, other causes of amenorrhea can cause either -Vaginal agenesis -Androgen insensitivity syndrome -Turners syndrome (45, X0)

  21. Amenorrhea, causes • Generalized pubertal delay e.g. Turner syndrome • Normal puberty e.g. PCOS • Abnormalities of the genital tract e.g. Ashermans syndrome

  22. Amenorrhea, management • Hx. • PE- These are probably the most important aspects in diagnosis • Remember to always rule out pregnancy • H & P suggests • Ovarian-axis problem- TSH, prolactin, FSH, LH • Hirsuitism-Testosterone, DHEAS, androstenedione and 17-OH progesterone • Chronic ds.- ESR, LFT’s, BUN, cr and UA • CNS- MRI

  23. Amenorrhea, management • If H and P gives no clues to diagnosis-exciting Use step wise approach to diagnosis

  24. Evaluation of Secondary Amenorrhea

  25. Abnormal MenstruationHere’s what you need to remember!! • Always R/O pregnancy, check pap • Try to differentiate anovulatory from ovulatory bleeding • Good history and physical is key( this applies to amenorrhea as well) • Do a focused work up based on your H & P rather than a random set of studies • In amenorrhea, where no indication of cause based on H & P, follow the stepwise algorithm for diagnosis • Know the INDICATIONS for endometrial sampling

  26. References • Slides 25 and 26 courtesy of: Master-Hunter T, Heiman D, Amenorrhea: Evaluation and Treatment. AFP April 15th 2006.

More Related