Menstrual Disorders Flashcards

1
Q

what happens in follicular phase?

A

FSH stimulates ovarian follicle development and granulosa cells to produce oestrogens
negative feedback from increasing oestrogen (and inhibin by dominant follicles) inhibits FSH production
decreasing FSH levels causes atresia of all follicles except dominant follicle

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2
Q

what happens in ovulation?

A

occurs due to LH surge

dominant follicle ruptures and releases the oocyte

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3
Q

what happens in luteal phase?

A

corpus luteum forms from left over follicle
corpus luteum produces progesterone
corpus luteum degrades (luteolysis) around 14 days after ovulation

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4
Q

how do hormones change over menstrual cycle?

A

FSH is declining at day 1
LH is fairly constant
FSH and LH surge around day 12 as oestrogen levels pass threshold where it exerts positive feedback on FSH and LH production, then decrease again
oestrogen steadily rises from day 1 peaking around day 12, then decreases
progesterone peaks a few days after oestrogen

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5
Q

endometrial events in menstrual cycle?

A

proliferative phase = oestrogen induced growth of endometrial glands and stroma
luteal phase = progesterone induced glandular secretory activity, decidualisation in late secretory phase, endometrial apoptosis and subsequent menstruation
menstruation = arteriolar constriction and shedding of functional endometrial layer, fibrinolysis inhibits scar tissue formation

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6
Q

normal menstruation?

A

lasts 4-6 days
flow peaks day 1-2
<80ml per menstruation
no clots or flooding

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7
Q

normal cycle length?

A

average = 28 days
between 21-35
should be no bleeding between menstruations and after intercourse

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8
Q

how long must there be no menstruation to be called amenorrhoea?

A

> 6 months

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9
Q

common causes of oligomenorrhoea?

A

PCOS

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10
Q

organic vs non-organic menorrhagia?

A
organic = pathology present
non-organic = no pathology, can be hormonal, AKA DUB
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11
Q

local organic causes of menorrhagia?

A
fibroids
adenomyosis
endocervical or endometrial polyp
cervical eversion
endometrial hyperplasia
intra-uterine contraceptive device
pelvic inflammatory disease
endometriosis
malignancy of cervix/uterus
hormone producing tumours
trauma
others (e.g AVM etc)
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12
Q

features of endometriosis?

A

chocolate brown cysts on endometrium

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13
Q

what systemic disorders can cause menorrhagia? (organic)

A
endocrine
- hyper/hypothyroid
- diabetes
- adrenal disease
- prolactin disorders
haemostasis disorders 
- von willebrand's
- ITP
- factor II, V, VII and XI deficiency
liver disorders
renal disorders
drugs (anticoagulants)
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14
Q

pregnancy related causes of menorrhagia (organic)?

A
miscarriage
ectopic pregnancy
gestational trophoblastic disease
postpartum haemorrhage
common causes in very young/old
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15
Q

how is DUB diagnosed?

A

diagnosis of exclusion

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16
Q

subgroups of DUB?

A

anovulatory
- 85% of DUB
- occurs in very young/old
- irregular cycle (miss a period so twice as much to shed at next period)
- more common in obese women
ovulatory
- more common in women aged 35-45 (just before menopause)
- regular heavy periods
- due to inadequate progesterone production by corpus luteum

17
Q

how is DUB investigated?

A
FBC (haemoglobin most important)
cervical smear
TSH
coagulation screen
renal/liver function
transvaginal ultrasound if examination indicates pathology(TVU)
- endometrial thickness
- presence of fibroids and other pelvic masses
endometrial sampling
- pipelle biopsies
- hysteroscopic directed
- dilatation and curettage
18
Q

important test if endometrial carcinoma is suspected?

A

endometrial sampling to test thickness

hysteroscope

19
Q

when is a hysteroscope used?

A

if a pipelle biopsy has failed?

done under general anaesthetic

20
Q

how is DUB managed medically?

A

progestogens (synthetic progesterone analongue)
combined oral contraceptive
danazol (testosterone analogue, not used often)
GnRH analogues (downgrades anterior pituitary receptors to reduced FSH and LH production, rarely used)
NSAIDs
anti-fibrinolytics (transalamyic acid?)
capillary wall stabilisers
progesterone releasing IUCD (mirena IUS)

21
Q

when is hormonal treatment used?

A

irregular cycle

progesterone or combined pill

22
Q

surgical management of DUB?

A
endometrial ablation
- endometrium is burned away
- safer and simpler
hysterectomy
- can be sub-total or total
- can be done vaginally or laproscopically