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Vaginal bleeding

One of the main problems involving the female reproductive organs is vaginal bleeding. Its causes range from hormonal imbalance to cancer, and various investigations may be used to differentiate between these causes. While hysterectomy (surgical removal of the uterus) has classically been the treatment for uncontrollable bleeding, other modalities are now becoming more common.

Contents

Anatomy

Blood loss per vaginam (Latin: from the vagina) may arise from the Fallopian tubes (rare), the uterus, the cervix or the vagina. Rarely, the blood may actually arise from the urinary tract (hematuria), although the vast majority of women can identify the difference.

Causes

Physiological causes of vaginal bleeding include menstruation. Exceptionally heavy bleeding during periods is termed menorrhagia. If bleeding occurs between periods, this is not necessarily pathological, but it is termed intermenstrual bleeding . If no period can be identified due to the unpredictable bleeding, metrorrhagia is used.

Premenopausal women:

During pregnancy: mild to moderate blood loss may be due to rupture of a small vein on the outer rim of the placenta. It can also herald a miscarriage, which is why urgent ultrasound is required to separate the two causes. Finally, placenta previa (a placenta partially or completely overlying the cervix) may bleed quite severely.

Postmenopausal women:

Investigation

The diagnosis can often be made on the basis of the bleeding pattern and other medical details, and (after a Pap smear) many premenopausal women are initially tried for a short period of time on the contraceptive pill. Vaginal ultrasound may identify any lesions or tumors in the uterus or ovaries. In postmenopausal women, a thickened endometrium on vaginal ultrasound is an indication to perform dilation and curettage to identify malignancy.

Complications

The main complication from protracted vaginal blood loss is iron deficiency anemia, which can develop insidiously. Eliminating the cause will resolve the anemia, although some women require iron supplements or blood transfusions to improve the anemia.



08-19-2006 15:59:36
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