4/10 Normal and Abnormal Menstrual Cycle Flashcards
Define dysfunctional uterine bleeding
Generally refers to anovulatory bleeding, or bleeding that is not from an anatomical etiology
Define breakthrough bleeding
Unexpected bleeding that occurs while a woman is on exogenous hormonal meds.
Better term: unscheduled bleeding. No correlation with the ovulatory process.
Define metrorrhagia.
Associated with anovulation or oligoovulation?
Irregular, frequent bleeding
Define menorrhagia.
Associated with anovulation or oligoovulation?
Prolonged or excessive menstrual blood loss with regular cycles
Ovulation is occurring; etiology is not due to anovulation
Define meno-metrorrhagia.
Associated with anovulation or oligoovulation?
Irregular menses with prolonged or excessive blood loss.
Why can eating disorders, stress, excessive exercise affect levels of LH and FSH?
Neural transmitters (dopamine, serotonin, endorphins) affected by all of those – and are very important to GnRH release.
Teens: we know that they bleed due to a negative feedback system between FSH and estrogen. Why don’t they also ovulate for the first few years?
They don’t make enough estrogen to cause ovulation
Remember we need an estrogen level around 250 for 2 days in order to induce LH surge -> egg extruding from follicle.
Corpus luteum: what does it produce?
Mainly progesterone.
some estrogen
What creates the cleavage plane between the uterine basalis and the endometrium?
Progesterone. both compacts down the endometrium and creates the cleavage plane.
Cards for the normal menstrual cycle are elsewhere, but here is Ann Davis’ quick review:
- Estrogen low -> FSH rises
- FSH stimulates follicles that increase estrogen; dominant follicle emerges
- As estrogen reaches a peak the LH surge occurs followed by ovulation
- Cellular remains of ovulatory follicle become the corpus luteum: producing progesterone, compacts the endometrium
- If CL does not “see” hcg by day 11 it withers away. Estrogen and progesterone withdrawal creates bleed
- Low estrogen thru negative feedback causes FSH to rise
What are the 2 phases of the menstrual cycle?
What hormone dominates each, and what effect does it have on the endometrium?
Proliferative/Follicular:
Estrogen dominates. Causes growth of the endometrium.
Secretory/Luteal:
Progesterone dominates. Causes compaction/stabilization of the endometrium.
The menstrual cycle is a gonadotropin independent or dependent phase?
Gonadotropin dependent.
The gonadotropin-independent element of the cycle occurs before the cycle??
During the secretory phase, what stimulates VEGF?
what consequences does this have for the corpus luteum?
LH stimulates VEGF - therefore it is LH that causes the CL to be so vascular.
CL is one of the most vascular structures in the body.
Occasionally a CL will bleed (especially a patient on anticoagulants or with a bleeding disorder)
what is responsible for primary dysmenorrhea?
Prostaglandins: PGF2a
Women w dysmenorrhea have up to 10x higher levels of PGF2a than others.
PGF2a also stimulates uterine contractions.
What defines a normal menstrual cycle in:
- cycle length?
- amount of flow?
- cycle length: Range 22-45d. Median 27d, Mean 29d
- amount of flow: 20-45 mLs