Case 12: Painful periods

 

Case 12: Painful periods

CASE 12: PAINFUL PERIODS
History
A 43-year-old woman is referred from her general practitioner (GP) with painful periods.
She says that her periods have always been quite heavy and painful but that in the last 2–3
years they have become almost unbearable. She bleeds every 24 days and the period lasts for
7–9 days with very heavy flow from day 2 to day 6. The pain starts approximately 36 h before
the onset of the bleeding and lasts until about day 5. The pain is constant, dull and severe,
such that she cannot do any housework or any social activities during this time. Her GP has
prescribed paracetamol and mefenamic acid in combination, which she says ‘takes the edge
off’ but does not fully relieve the symptoms.
She has had four normal deliveries and her husband had a vasectomy several years ago.
There is no history of intermenstrual or postcoital discharge and she has no abnormal discharge. Her smear history is normal, the most recent being 18 months ago. She takes citalopram
for depression but currently reports her mood as fine. She does not drink alcohol or smoke.
Examination
The abdomen is soft and there is vague tenderness in the suprapubic area. The cervix appears
normal. On bimanual palpation the uterus is approximately 10 weeks size, soft and bulky. She
is tender on palpation but there is no cervical excitation, adnexal tenderness or adnexal masses.




INVESTIGATIONS
Transvaginal ultrasound scan is shown in Fig. 12.1.
Transvaginal ultrasound report: there is asymmetrical uterine enlargement, with a thickened posterior uterine wall. There are ill-defined cystic spaces within the posterior myometrial wall. There is an indistinct myometrial-endometrial border. Both ovaries appear
normal in size and morphology.
Questions
• What is the likely diagnosis?
• How would you further investigate and manage this woman?
Figure 12.1 Transvaginal ultrasound
scan showing a midsaggital view of
the uterus.

ANSWER 12
The symptoms of dysmenorrhoea and menorrhagia and the ultrasound report suggest
a diagnosis of adenomyosis. This is a benign condition whereby functioning endometrial
glands and stroma are found within the myometrium. With each period bleeding occurs
from the endometrial tissue into the smooth muscle, with associated pain. It tends to occur
in women over 35 years and risk factors include increased parity, termination and previous
caesarean section. The condition may commonly be found in association with endometriosis.
Classically the diagnosis may only be made histologically after hysterectomy for dysmenorrhoea. More recently however the diagnosis can be suspected by ultrasound or magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI) scan.

! Causes of dysmenorrhoea
• Idiopathic
• Premenstrual syndrome
• Pelvic inflammatory disease
• Endometriosis
• Adenomyosis
• Submucosal pedunculated fibroids
• Iatrogenic (e.g. intrauterine contraceptive device (IUCD) or cervical stenosis after
large-loop excision of the transformation zone (LLETZ))

Further investigation
If the diagnosis is in doubt then an MRI scan may be requested. Hysterectomy to obtain
histological diagnosis would be inappropriate.

Management
The initial management involves analgesia such as mefenamic acid and codydramol.
Tranexamic acid reduces the amount of bleeding, and this may secondarily reduce the
amount of pain. Suppression of menstruation with gonadotrophin-releasing hormone analogues is a short-term measure. The levonorgestrel-releasing intrauterine device is another
option to locally suppress the endometrial tissue, and may resolve the pain.
As a last resort hysterectomy should be performed.

KEY POINTS
• The prevalence of adenomyosis is unknown, as diagnosis is only confirmed by
hysterectomy.
• It is a cause of menorrhagia and dysmenorrhoea in older women.
• Hysterectomy may be avoided by use of analgesia or hormonal suppression.

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