Ob Gyn: Menstrual Cycle, AUB, dysmenorrhea and PMS
During a normal menstrual cycle, [Estrogen] declines precipitously on day _____
14
Primary amenorrhea suspected in absence of menstruation in a __ with normal growth and secondary sexual development
15 year old
Most potent form of estrogen is
17B-estradiol
If no fertilization of the ovum by day __ the corpus luteum degenerates into the ___ ____
24 corpus albicans
A diagnosis of PMDD requires _______ or more symptoms to be present during __________
5 the week prior to menses and resolving within a few days after menses starts
amenorrhea is diagnosed if menses are absent for >
6 months
During _________________, estrogen continues to be released from the dominant follice, causing growth and thickening of the uterine lining
Anovulation
Tx of PMDD
Anxiolytics SSRI BC to inhibit ovulation
Menstrual blood is mainly _________ and contains ________, ______, and ________
Arterial tissue debris, prostaglandins, and fibrinolysin
PMDD Tx: Last resort
B/L oophorectomy
Hypomenorrhea may be a normal desirable effect of
BC use
menometrorrhagia
Bleeding at irregular intervals which is also heavy
With AUB you should order
CBC, HCG, and TSH cytology pelvic us endometrial biopsy hysteroscopy D n C
Medical therapies for AUB include
Contraceptives Nsaids Antifibrinolytic therapy
When the _______ regresses, hormonal support of the endometrium is withdrawn
Corpus luteum
Polymenorrhea- Definition, usually associated with ______________
Cycles that occur too frequently anovulation
Exclusion of all possible pathological causes of abnormal bleeding leads to a diagnosis of
Dysfunctional Uterine Bleeding (DUB).
Management of dub
Dysfunctional uterin bleeding hysterectomy depends on age of patient and severity of symptoms
Hormone which causes proliferation of the endometrium
Estrogen
PMDD treatment
First line- anxiolytics, SSRIs, contraceptives Second line- GnRH agonists (chemical menopause) Last resort- oophorectomy
What are the two phases of the menstrual cycle? Which phase of the menstrual cycle is more regular?
Follicular (estrogen dominant) and luteal (progesterone dominant) Luteal phase is more regular
Normal menstrual cycle id divided into
Follicular phase- 14-21 Luteal phase- generally 14 days (less variable dt ovarian structure) 21-35 day normal variation
PMDD second line Tx
GnRH agonist- goal to cause a chemical menopause
Menorrhagia: causes
Heavy and/or porlonged bleeding Gushing, accompanied by clots Causes include uterine fibroids, adenomyosis, malignancies, BC ADR
Estrogen has positive feedback on the _________ and ________ on days ______; the rest of the cycle estrogen and ___________ provide ____________
Hypothalamus (inc GnRH) Anterior pituitary (inc LH and FSH) progesterone negative feedback
HPO axis
Hypothalamus --> GnRH Anterior pituitary -->FSH and LH FSH= growth of ovarian follicles LH= ovulation trigger
This triggers ovulation
LH surge (leutinizing hormone) Happens when [estrogen] reaches a certain threshold
Oligomenorrhea
Menses that occur more than 35 days apart
Contact bleeding
Post coital bleeding
PMDD
Premenstrual dysmorphic disorder
Follicular phase
Proliferative phase: Day 1= first day when period starts Estrogen dominant- secreted by cells in the ovarian follicles Rapid proliferation of the endometrium and uterine glands
Luteal phase
Secretory phase Progesterone dominant- secreted by corpus luteum stabilization of the endometrial lining so its perfect for egg implantation More regular portion of the cycle
Antifibrinolytic therapy
Tranexamic acid
Hypomenorrhea
Unusually light menstrual flow
Post-menopausal bleeding needs to R/O
Uterine cancer Endometrial biopsy
In ___________ there is no formation of the corpus luteum
anovulation
In ______________, the uterine lining becomes thick and eventually sloughs off in an unpredictable and erratic fashion
anovulation
Average blood loss of a normal menstual cycle is
approximately 30 ml
Ovulatory bleeding occurs
between menstrual cycles (metrorrhagia)
Progesterone is secreted by the
corpus luteum remaining structure from ruptured follicle
D n C
dilation and curetage diagnostic and curative scrape out lining to stop heavy bleeding in hopes that the menstrual cycle will reset itself
secondary dysmenorrhea could be caused by
endometriosis, adenomyosis, or uterine fibroids
Follicular phase is
estrogen dominant
Significantly more cycle variablity in
first 5-7 years after menarche and last ten years prior to menopause
These cell secrete estrogen
granulosa and theca cells
2 types of arteries in endometriumm
long coiled- shed monthly short straight basilar artery not shed
PMS symptoms correlate with the _______________ phase of the cycle
luteal (production of progesterone) diagnosis by history differentiate pms from pmdd (significant change in personality every month)
Secondary amenorrhea
menses stops for > 6 months in a previously menstruating woman
dysmenorrhea
painful menstruation caused by prostaglandins Associated symptomsN/V/D HA NSAIDS and oral contraceptives
Membranous dysmenorrhea
passing a single cast of the endometrial cast shed as a single cavity; painful
____ is absolutely vital to sustain a pregnancy
progesterone (secreted by corpus luteum)
luteal phase is
progesterone dominant secreted by the corpus luteum
Causes cramps during menstrual cycle
prostaglandins
Recommended Txs for PMS
reduce salt, exercise, b vitamins perhaps, contraceptives, occasionally anti-depressant or anxiolytics
adenomyosis
uterine lining growing into the walls globular boggy feeling uterus