1 / 31

بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم

بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم. Dysmenorrhea. Introduction to Primary Care a course of the Center of Post Graduate Studies i n FM. PO Box 27121 – Riyadh 11417 Tel: 4912326 – Fax: 4970847. Objectives. General considerations. Classification of dysmenorrhea Causes of dysmenorrhea

yannis
Télécharger la présentation

بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم Module 6 - ppt 5 Dr. Maysoon Al-Amoud

  2. Dysmenorrhea Introduction to Primary Care a course of the Center of Post Graduate Studies in FM PO Box 27121 – Riyadh 11417 Tel: 4912326 – Fax: 4970847

  3. Objectives • General considerations. • Classification of dysmenorrhea • Causes of dysmenorrhea • Clinical picture of dysmenorrhea • Management of dysmenorrhea Module 6 - ppt 5 Dr. Maysoon Al-Amoud

  4. Introduction • Dysmenorrhoea - painful menstruation- is one of the most common gynaecologic problems seen by the family physician. • It affects 50% of all women and between 20% & 90% of all adolescent women. • ~ 1% of all adult & 15% of adolescent women describe their dysmenorrhoea as severe. • It is the leading cause of morbidity in female high school students, resulting in absence from school and nonparticipation in sports. Module 6 - ppt 5 Dr. Maysoon Al-Amoud

  5. Classification Primary : The presence of painful menses in the absence of disease Secondary : The occurrence of painful menstruation caused by pelvic disease. Module 6 - ppt 5 Dr. Maysoon Al-Amoud

  6. Risk factors of dysmenorrhea • Age < 20 years • Attempts to lose weight • Depression/Anxiety • Heavy menses • Nulliparity • Smoking • Disruption of social network

  7. Causes of dysmenorrhoea Primary dysmenorrhea • No underlying pelvic pathology. • Caused by release of prostaglandin F2from tendometrium at time of ovulatory menstruation •  uterine hypercontactility . • Ischemia of uterine wall during a contraction causes pain. Module 6 - ppt 5 Dr. Maysoon Al-Amoud

  8. Causes of dysmenorrhoea Primary dysmenorrhea ... continue • Prostaglandins induce smooth muscle contraction in the uterus, as well as in intestine, bronchi, & vasculature, • Account for the systemic symptoms of diarrhea, asthma exacerbation, hypertension, & headache experienced by women with 1o dysmenorrhea. • As contractions cause the pressure within uterus to exceed that of the systemic circulation, ischemia ensues, causing an anginal epuivalent in uterus. Module 6 - ppt 5 Dr. Maysoon Al-Amoud

  9. Causes of dysmenorrhoea Secondary dysmenorrhea • Underlying pelvic pathology with variable severity : • Adenomyosis, myomas, polyps, • Infections – chronic pelvic, endometriosis, • Tumors, dhesions, leiomyomas, • Intrauterine devices, • Anatomic causes, • Bladder pathology & GI pathology • Psychosexual problems • Blind uterine horn(rare). Module 6 - ppt 5 Dr. Maysoon Al-Amoud

  10. Clinical findings Symptoms: • History of : • Pain at menses onset for 12-72 hrs • Pain is : crampy & intermittent in nature • Pain most intense in lower abdomen, ± to back or upper thighs. • Headache, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea & fatigue • Worst on 1st day of menses then gradually resolve • Onset: gradual with 1st yr then worsen as menses become regular. • If 2ry: onset >20 yrs old, for 5-7 ds & worsen progressively. ± pelvic pain not with menses. Module 6 - ppt 5 Dr. Maysoon Al-Amoud

  11. Dysmenorrhea Painful Menstruation Spasmodic Cyclic Radiate to back, inner aspect of thighs

  12. Clinical findings Physical examination: • Pelvic examination + cervical smear pain not with menses & culture should be for all married pts presenting with a chief complaint of dysmenorrhea • If find cul-de-sac induration & uterosacal ligament nodularity on pelvic examination  endometriosis. • Uterine abnormalities or tenderness  raise index of suspicion for underlying pathology as a cause. Module 6 - ppt 5 Dr. Maysoon Al-Amoud

  13. Management • Medical therapy • Physical modalities • Alternative & complementary therapy • Behavioral modification • Surgical intervention Module 6 - ppt 5 Dr. Maysoon Al-Amoud

  14. Medical therapy Aim:  endometrial prostaglandin production; ± CC • Drug groups: • NSAIDs – diclofenac, ibuprofen, • Danzol • Leuprolide • Depo-methroxyprogesteron-terone acetate • CC :oral & intravaginal • COX-2 inhibitors • Levonorgestrel IUD • Nifedipine • Transdermal CC patch Module 6 - ppt 5 Dr. Maysoon Al-Amoud

  15. Oral Contraceptive Pills • Inhibition of ovulation • Desire contraception • No relief or cannot tolerate NSAIDs • No contraindication OCs Minipill DMPA GnRHa

  16. Agents used in the treatment of dysmenorrhea

  17. Physical modalities • Utilize : • Heat • Acupuncture or acupressure • Spinal manipulation • A heated abdominal patch was demonstrated to have efficacy similar to ibuprofen (400 mg) • quicker - not greater relief of heat + ibuprofen • Acupuncture : in91% relief as compared 36% of control. Module 6 - ppt 5 Dr. Maysoon Al-Amoud

  18. Alternative & complementary therapy • Numerous supplements & herbal formulations. • Few are backed by solid evidence. • Example: • Vitamin E 200mg units bd daily, beginning 2 days before menses & continuing through 1st 3 days of bleeding  shorter duration & lower intensity of pain than in placebo. Module 6 - ppt 5 Dr. Maysoon Al-Amoud

  19. Behavioral modification • Life-style: strenuous Ex. & caffeine intake • can modulate prostaglandin-induced uterine contractions. • Strenuous Ex. :  uterine tone uterine “angina” periods +  prostaglandins ...... •  strenuous Ex. In 1st few days of menses  ± dysmenorrhea. • Caffeine : controversial effect, it  uterine tone by  uterine cyclic adenosine monophosphote level. Module 6 - ppt 5 Dr. Maysoon Al-Amoud

  20. Surgical intervention • Continues to have significant dysmenorrhea + preceding treatment testing for secondary dysmenorrhea . • Chronic pelvic pain not responding to supportive therapy  adhesions, endometriosis or chronic PID discovered on diagnostic laparoscopy. • Hysterectomy is an option for refractory 1o amenorrhea. Module 6 - ppt 5 Dr. Maysoon Al-Amoud

  21. Treatment at PHC centres • primary dysmenorrhea: try previously mentioned methods. • Secondary dysmenorrhea: refer to investigate (e.g. laparoscopy) & treat underlying cause Have patience and empathy. Module 6 - ppt 5 Dr. Maysoon Al-Amoud

  22. Tips for general practitioners • Adolescents are unlikely to have underlying disease and so do not usually require a pelvic examination • First line treatment for dysmenorrhoea should be oral contraceptives and/or non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs • Specialist referral is indicated if oral contraceptives and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs fail • The levonorgestrel intrauterine system is useful in managing secondary dysmenorrhoea

  23. When to refer • Referral for laparoscopy is indicated if initial measures, such as oral contraceptives and NSAIDs, have not improved symptoms. • Referral is also indicated if secondary dysmenorrhoea is suspected (for example, associated menstrual symptoms • Menorrhagia, • Intermenstrual or postcoital bleeding • Dyspareunia • Abnormal pelvic examination • If the patient has pain management problems with disruption to daily living.

  24. Summary • Dysmenorrhoea is a common gynaecological condition that is underdiagnosed and undertreated • Simple analgesics and non-steroidal anti-inflammatories are effective in up to 70% of women • Oral contraceptives can be considered for women who wish to avoid pregnancy • For women seeking alternative therapies heat, thiamine, magnesium, and vitamin E may be effective

  25. تم بحمد الله Thank you Dr. Maysoon Al-Amoud Module 6 - ppt 5 Dr. Maysoon Al-Amoud

More Related