Vaginal Bleeding Flashcards
Sequence of Events
Open question
Timeline- how did it start, and progression
Symptom Analysis (SOCRAT)
Site- is it definitely the vagina
Onset
Character- colour, clots, how much
Radiation- do you use tampons or pads? Does it soak them?
Associated symptoms- pain, discharge, menstruation, constitutional symptoms
Timing- is is there all the time, how often have you noticed it, could it be your period, does it occur mid cycle, does it come after sex
Systems Review
Menstrual history Pain Sexual History Vaginal discharge Obstetric history Constitutional- FWARJNL (tired/breathless)
Red flags for Vaginal Bleeding
Severe pain 5-12 weeks since LMP Weight loss Postmenopausal bleeding Intermenstrual bleeding Postcoital bleeding Missed cervical smears
Patients Perspective
Feelings and effect on life
ICE
Background
PMH (bleeding disorder, previous cancer)
DH (anticoagulants)
FH
SH
Important point
NB- say “people can feel embarrassed about this issue but it is common, and I am here to help”
Postcoital Bleed (Causes)
Cervical cancer
- HPV 16 18
- Can also be intermenstrual bleeding
- Many risk factors
Cervical ectropion
-Ring around cervical os on speculum exam
Cervical polyp
- May bleed on contact
- Intermenstrual bleeding too
Postmenopausal Bleed (>12 months after LMP) (Causes)
Endometrial cancer
- Risk factors
- Also postcoital and intermenstrual bleeding
Atrophic vaginitis
- Dry itchy vagina with dyspareunia
- Urinary incontinence and recurrent UTI’s
- Very common due to low oestrogen (in menopause)
Endometrial Hyperplasia
- Diagnosed on biopsy
- Risk cancer for cancer development
Intermenstrual
NB- some women have spotting around day 14 of cycle that is normal. Breakthrough bleeding may also occur a few months after starting hormonal contraception
Ectopic preganncy
- Severe sharp colicky pain in sexually active women
- Diarrhoea and vomiting may be present
- Rupture can lead to severe pain peritonism and shock
- around 5-12 weeks LMP
- IUD increases risk
Spontaneous abortion
- up to 24 weeks loss of pregnancy
- lower abdominal cramps, passing blood clots with tissue
STI
- Sexually active young woman with discharge that may be smelly
- Risk factors: adolescent, multiple or new partner, unprotected sex
Investigations
Bedside- abdominal and pelvic exam, PV exam, urinary pregnancy test, STI screen (swabs), cervical smear (if due)
Bloods- FBC, bHCG,
Specialist- TV USS, colposcopy (after abnormal smear)
Menorrhagia
DUB Uterine fibroids Endometriosis Cervical or endometrial polyps Adenomyosis Pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) Endometritis Endometrial hyperplasia or carcinoma Hypothyroidism Bleeding disorders (e.g. Von Willebrand’s disease) Iatrogenic (e.g. anticoagulant treatment; copper IUD) Climacteric