Gynae: Dysmenorrhea Flashcards
How would you explore the presenting complaint of a patient with dysmenorrhea?
- How long has this been going on for? New onset?
- Where does she experience the pain? What does it feel like?
- When exactly does it happen? (primary dysmenorrhoea often coincides with the start of menstruation; secondary dysmenorrhoea may precede and be relieved by the start.)
- Anything make it better?
- Anything make it worse?
What other gynae symptoms are important to ask about when discussing dysmenorrhea?
- Are periods regular? How long do they last?
- Are they heavy?
- Dyspareunia?
- Discharge? Abnormal bleeding? (e.g. PCB)
- Urine/bowel symptoms?
- Bloating, lethargy, weight loss?
- Symptoms of anaemia (especially if menorrhagia)
What background history do we need for a patient with dysmenorrhea?
- Gynae history – previous infections, operations, smears
- Obstetric history – and has she ever been trying to get pregnant and not
- PMHx – any other medical problems (e.g. IBS, renal problems)
- FHx, DHx, contraception, smoking, alcohol
What is dysmenorrhea?
Painful menstruation, associated with high prostaglandin levels, due to contraction and uterine ischaemia
What is the differential diagnosis for dysmenorrhea?
- Simple (primary) dysmenorrhoea is the most common cause of painful periods- no organic cause found. Occurs in 50%, responds to NSAIDS or CCP.
- Secondary dysmenorrhea: fibroids, adenomyosis, endometriosis, PID or ovarian tumours. Pain precedes and is relieved by onset of period.
What examinations should you do for dysmenorrhea?
- Speculum examination – for any obvious lesions, discharge, ulceration, smeel, tenderness, visualisation of cervix.
- Bimanual pelvic examination – for fixed retro-verted uterus (endometriosis, PID), nodular “string of beads” uterosarcal ligaments, adnexal tenderness
- Abdominal examination
- Observations: full set – how is the patient systemically
What investigations should you do for dysmenorrhea?
- Triple swab assessment: check for infective cause
- Bloods: CA125 (may be somewhat raised in endometriosis), FBC
- Transvaginal USS – may show ovarian endometriomas/fibroids/other lesions
- Standard for endometriosis is laparoscopy +/- biopsy
What is endometriosis?
- Ectopic endometrial tissue outside the uterine cavity.
- It may arise from retrograde menstruation, haematogenous spread, or coelomic metaplasia (less popular theory).
- Under hormonal control so may bleed cyclically, causing pain.
- Regresses after menopause and during pregnancy.
- Occurs throughout pelvis, can reach lungs. If severe, pelvis can be’ frozen’ due to adesions
- Complications include: adhesions (which may impact fertility), menstrual disturbance (may occur if there is extensive ovarian involvement
Describe a typical history and examination findings for a patient with endometriosis
- Hx: Sx often absent, can be cyclic chronic pelvic pain. May present c/o dysmenorrhoea before period, deep dysparenuria, subfertility, pain on passing stool. Rupture of endometrioma cause pain
- O/E: tenderness/ thickening behind uterus or in adnexa. Retroverted+immobile uterus if severe. May be able to visualise it with speculum. If mild, pelvis will feel normal.
What are the medical and surgical options for endometriosis?
Medical:
•Combined OCP (negative feedback on gonadotropin release – inhibits ovulation + thickens cervical mucus + thins endometrium)
•cyclical or continuous progestogens (S/E – weight gain, fluid retention, erratic bleeding)
•Gonadotrophin releasing hormone analogues (limited to 6 months due to menopausal-type side effects including on bone mineral density)
•Progesterone IUS (prevents implantation and inhibits penetration of sperm into uterus by causing changes in cervical mucus)
Surgical:
•laparoscopic laser ablation/diathermy – symptomatic improvement in 70%
•TAH+Bilateral Ssalpingo-oophrectomy – “last resort”
What is chronic pelvic pain syndrome? What is the management?
-Intermittent or chronic pelvic pain of >6 months, with no known organic cause.
-Non-gynaecological problems may be the cause; IBS is common and psychological factors may be important (including significantly increased levels of childhood sexual or physical abuse).
-Management options include counselling and reassurance, gastroenterology referral, laser uterosacral nerve ablation, TAH + BSO.