women’s health - ob/gyn week 2

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Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2 Abnormal Uterine Bleeding Amy Love, ND

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Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2. Abnormal Uterine Bleeding Amy Love, ND. Lecture Overview. Types of AUB, diagnosis, treatment Common causes, management. Abnormal Uterine Bleeding. Abnormal Bleeding (AUB) includes: Menses that are too frequent (more often than every 26 d) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

Women’s Health - OB/gynweek 2

Abnormal Uterine Bleeding

Amy Love, ND

Page 2: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

Lecture Overview

• Types of AUB, diagnosis, treatment

• Common causes, management

Page 3: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

Abnormal Uterine BleedingAbnormal Bleeding (AUB) includes:

• Menses that are too frequent (more often than every 26 d)

• Heavy periods (esp. if with egg-sized clots)• Any bleeding that occurs at the wrong time,

including spotting• Any bleeding lasting longer than 7 days• Extremely light periods or no periods at all

Page 4: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

Abnormal Bleeding Patterns

• Menorrhagia: aka hypermenorrhea, prolonged (> 7 days) or excessive bleeding at regular intervals

• Metrorrhagia: frequent menses at irregular intervals, the amount being variable

• Menometrorrhagia: prolonged bleeding at irregular intervals

Page 5: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

Abnormal Bleeding Patterns (continued)

• Oligomenorrhea: infrequent uterine bleeding; intervals between bleeding episodes vary from 35 days to 6 months

• Polymenorrhea: occurring at regular intervals of < 21 days

• Amenorrhea: lack of menstruation• Dysmenorrhea: painful menstruation

AUB considered Dysfunctional Uterine Bleeding (DUB) if no organic cause found

Page 6: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

Abnormal Bleeding Etiology• Reproductive Tract

• Abortion (threatened, incomplete, or missed)• Ectopic pregnancy• Malignancies• Endometrial hyperplasia• Cervical lesions (erosions, polyps, cervicitis)• Myomas (uterine fibroid)• Foreign bodies (IUD)• Traumatic vaginal lesions

Page 7: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

Abnormal Bleeding Etiology (continued)

• Systemic Disease• Disorders of blood coagulation

– von Willebrand’s disease, leukemia, sepsis, Idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpurea

• Hypothyroidism > hyperthyroidism• Liver cirrhosis

• Iatrogenic causes:– Oral/ injectable hormones or other steroids

(birth control pill, HRT)– Tranquilizers/ psychotropic drugs

(Always ask about medications)

Page 8: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

Abnormal Bleeding• Ovulatory

• Heavy menses in women who ovulate and who do not have a coagulopathy or uterine abnormality

• Most commonly occurs after adolescent years and before perimenopausal years

• Circulating hormone levels may be the same as in women without AUB

• May exhibit decreased prostaglandin synthesis and endometrial prostaglandin receptors

• Anovulatory• Continuous estradiol production without corpus luteum

formation/ progesterone production• Estrogen stimulates endometrial proliferation; endometrium

may outgrow blood supply, necrose, and slough off irregularly

Page 9: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

Abnormal Bleeding (cont.)• Diagnosis

– Detailed history (easy bruising/ bleeding, medications, contraceptive methods, symptoms of pregnancy and systemic diseases, pain?)

– Labs: hemoglobin, serum iron, serum ferritin, TSH, beta-HCG, liver function, PAP smear, CBC, FSH, LH, STD testing

– Imaging: hysteroscopy, pelvic ultrasound– Endometrial biopsy

Page 10: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

Abnormal Bleeding (cont.)• Conventional Management (in general)

– Estrogen: causes rapid edometrial growth over denuded and raw endometrium (in high doses stops acute bleeding)

– Progesterone: added to estrogen after bleeding has stopped; organizes endometrium so that sloughing process (when hormones are stopped) is less heavy

– Birth control pills: long-term management– Mirena: progesterone- releasing IUD– NSAIDs: reduce menstrual blood loss in women who ovulate

(inhibit prostaglandins) by 20-50%– Surgical therapy

» Dilatation and Curettage» Endometrial Ablation: laser photovaporization of endometrium

(may cause scarring, adhesions, uterine contraction)» Hysterectomy (only if AUB severe and persistent)

Page 11: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

• Menorrhagia:– Birth control pills: tend to reduce heaviness of flow– If heavy flow may result in anemia; decreasing heaviness

may restore normal iron levels– Iron replacement therapy

• Pills can cause nausea, upset stomach, constipation• Better absorbed if taken with Vit C (tomato, orange, pepper)• Food-based iron better absorbed and less constipating

– Food sources include: molasses, dried figs, meat (esp liver), lentils, dark leafy greens (need to be cooked)

– Cooking in an iron skillet increases food iron content, especially acidic foods

– Avoid black tea and other tannin sources at mealtimes

Page 12: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

• Metrorrhagia:– If menses too frequent but regular, ovarian production of

progesterone may be insufficient– If menses are inconsistent, may be anovulatory

• birth control pill used to establish regularity

– If menses irregular (unpredictable intervals) but otherwise “normal”

• low-dose birth control pill helps establish regularity

– If spotting in between regular menses, suspect a mechanical problem such as fibroids or polyps

• Ultrasound or sonohysterography (fluid-enchanced U/S)• Copper IUD may be responsible for spotting

– Screen for PCOS, thyroid disease

Page 13: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

• Natural management approaches• Tissue tonification– bleeding may be sign of

poor tissue tone of mucus membranes, uterus• Stress reduction– endocrine system adversely

affected by stress, inappropriately timed release of hormones

• Reduce inflammation– omega-3 fatty acids• Correct nutritional deficiencies: Vitamins A, B

complex, C, K, bioflavonoids

Page 14: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

• Botanical Considerations• Chaste tree/ Vitex agnus castus: balances estrogen-

progesterone ratio to normalize and regulate cycle• Ginger/ Zingiber officinale: anti-inflamatory (inhibits

prostaglandin and leukotriene synth), helps reduce menstrual flow

• Astringent herbs: Sheperd’s purse/ Capsella bursa pastoris, Yarrow/ Achillea millefolium

• Botanical uterine tonics: Dong quai/ Angelica sinensis, Raspberry leaves/ Rubus idaeus

• Uterine stimulants: Vitex, Achillea, Mitchella repens, Blue cohosh/ Caulophyllum thalictroides

• Stop semi-acute blood loss: Cinnamon, Fleabane/ Erigeron spp., Shepherd’s purse

Page 15: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

(TCM info from Dr. Fritz)• Acupoints to regulate bleeding

– Sp-1: strengthens Sp function of keeping blood in vessels; esp. good for uterine bleeding

– BL-17, Sp-10, K-8, Lr-1

• Herbs to stop bleeding?– Pao Jiang (fried ginger), Ai ye– San qi, Qian cao gen, Pu huang– Da ji, Xiao ji

Page 16: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

Amenorrhea• No menstrual flow for at least 6 months• Physiologic: during pregnancy or post-partum (eg

during lactation)• Pathologic: due to endocrine, genetic, and/or

anatomic disorders– Failure to menstruate is a symptom of these disorders;

amenorrhea is therefore not a final diagnosis. If a woman is not pregnant or breastfeeding (or menopausal), amenorrhea is not normal and must be investigated.

• Can be Primary or Secondary

Page 17: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

Primary AmenorrheaAbsence of menses in a woman who has never menstruated by the age of 16.5 years

• Primary– No secondary sex characteristics

• Genetic disorders, enzyme deficiencies• If uterus not present, may also have congenital kidney

and cardiac defects

– Secondary sex characteristics• Anatomic abnormalities, thyroid dz, hyperprolactinemia

Page 18: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

Primary Amenorrhea …

• Breasts Absent/ Uterus Present– Gonadal Failure:

• Most common cause of primary amenorrhea

– Chromosomal disorders:• Two X chromosomes needed for ovarian

development– Turner syndrome (45,X)– 46,X, abnormal X– Mosaicism (X/ XX; X/XX/XXX)

Page 19: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

…– Hypothalamic failure secondary to inadequate GnRH

release• Neurotransmitter defect: not enough GnRH is secreted• Kallman syndrome: not enough GnRH is synthesized• Congenital anatomic defect in CNS• CNS neoplasm

– Pituitary Failure• Isolated gonadotrophin insufficiency (thalassemia major,

retinitis pigmentosa)• Pituitary neoplasia• Mumps, encephalitis• Newborn kernicterus• Prepubertal hypothyroidism

Page 20: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

…• Breast development/ Uterus absent

– Androgen resistance (testicular feminization)• Genetically transmitted disorder• Absence of androgen receptor synthesis or action• XY karyotype; normally functioning male gonads, normal levels

of testosterone• Lack of receptors on target organs so there is a lack of male

differentiation of external and internal genitalia• Normal female external genitalia; no male nor female internal

organs• Gonads need to be removed around age 18 due to their high

malignant potential

– Congenital absence of the uterus• Second most frequent cause of primary amenorrhea• Occurs in 1 in 4000-5000 female births• Also may have congenital kidney and cardiac defects

Page 21: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

…• Absent Breast and Uterine development

• Rare• Male karyotype• Due to enzyme deficiencies

• Breast development/ Uterus present– Second largest category (approx. 1/3)– Due to problems in:

• Hypothalamus• Pituitary• Ovaries• Uterus

• Diagnosis:• Labs: estradiol, FSH, progesterone, serum prolactin• Chromosomal testing• Imaging: cranial CT scan or MRI

Page 22: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

Primary Amenorrhea (continued)

• Likely already diagnosed and worked up by the time they get to your office

• Ask your clinic instructors if they have had any experience with this patient population

• Cannot have menses without uterus!

Page 23: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

Secondary AmenorrheaAbsence of menses for longer than 6-12 mo, in a woman who has menstruated previously

• Secondary– Thyroid dz, hyperprolactinemia, anatomic causes (low

weight, uterine adhesions), medications– Normal estrogen, normal FSH

• Chronic anovulation, ovarian neoplasm, congenital adrenal hyperplasia, PCOS, Cushing’s dz, high stress

– Low estrogen, normal FSH• Hypothalamic, functional, chronic dz, Addison’s dz, pituitary-

hypothalamic lesions

– Low estrogen, high FSH• Ovarian failure

Page 24: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

Conventional Treatment of Amenorrhea

• Primary– Surgery and/or radiation for operable tumors and

anatomic abnormalities– Cyclic estrogen/progestin

• To initiate and maintain secondary sex characteristics

• Osteoporosis protection

• Secondary– Surgery for tumors– Psychotherapy for functional– Cyclic hormones for anovulation

Page 25: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

CAM treatment of Amenorrhea

• Treat the underlying cause

- Hypothyroid

- Stress

- Eating disorder

- Genetic

- Tumors

- Systemic diseases

Page 26: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

Premature Ovarian Failure• Low estrogen, high FSH• Managing Estrogen deficiency symptoms

– Osteoporosis – Surveillance- DEXA– Calcium/Magnesium/D/K/trace minerals– Exercise-weight bearing– Age related dose – OCP’s or bio-identical HRT

– Libido, vaginal atrophy – may benefit from Testosterone

– General mind/body support– Traditional emmenagogues

– Mitchella repens, Achillea millefolium (yarrow), Vitex agnus castus (chaste tree), Caulophyllum (blue cohosh)

Page 27: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome (PCOS)

• Diagnosis – Symptoms

• Oligo or amenorrhea• Obesity• Infertility• Metabolic syndrome• Hirsutism

– Signs• Bilateral polycystic ovaries• Elevated LH and LH to FSH ratio• Elevated free testosterone and DHEAs• Abnormal gonadotrophin secretion• Glucose intolerance and elevated insulin

Page 28: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

PCOS• Is a diagnosis of exclusion

• Must document the following:– Oligo or amenorrhea– Clinical evidence of hyperandrogenism, or biochemical evidence of

hyperandrogenemia– Exclusion of other disorders that can cause menstrual irregularity and

hyperandrogenism

• May also exhibit:– Alopecia– Skin tags– Acanthosis nigra (brown skin patches)– Exhaustion– Lack of mental alertness– Decreased libido– Thyroid disorders– Anxiety/ depression

Page 29: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

Conventional Txt of PCOS• Metformin – helps promote ovulation

and improve metabolic derangements

• Diet and exercise for weight management and insulin resistance

• OCP’s, GnRH agonists, spironolactone and other agents for hirsutism

Page 30: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

CAM txt of PCOS Strategies

Treat insulin resistance, hyperinsulinemia Address androgen excess problems Provide hormone support Address fertility issues, obesity Address long term amenorrhea

complications Osteoporosis Heart disease

Page 31: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

CAM txt of PCOS (cont) Increase SHBG:

soy, flax, nettles, green tea Improve insulin resistance:

vitamin C, Cr High protein, low Carbs

Reduce testosterine activity Saw palmetto (serenoa repens) - 5-alpha-reductase inhib

Hormone support Vitex Progesterone

TCM - you tell me…

Page 32: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

More CAM txt for PCOS• Reduce inflammation

– Turmeric/ Curcuma longa/ Yu Jin (cools blood, moves qi, breaks stasis)

– Ginger

• Balance cholesterol– HDL/LDL ratio better predictor of risk factors than total

cholesterol – Krill oil and other omega-3 fatty acids

• Decrease stress– Tai chi, qi gong, yoga, meditation. laughter

Page 33: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

Risks of Amenorrhea• Anovulatory amenorrhea is associated with

increased risk of endometrial hyperplasia and cancer of the uterus due to an “unopposed estrogen state” – Progesterone is produced by corpus luteum, which

is formed after ovulation

• Majority of amenorrheic women are in hypo-estrogen state– Later risk of osteoporosis, fractures– Rising lipid levels– Higher risk of cardiovascular disease

Page 34: Women’s Health - OB/gyn week 2

Review• What is “normal menstruation”?

• What are some types of AUB?

• What’s the difference between primary and secondary amenorrhea?