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Menorrhagia:
When Your
Time of the Month is Too Much
Excerpt
By
Kathleen Doheny,
HealthScoutNews
For most women, the average loss of blood during a menstrual period
is a little more than one ounce.
But millions of women lose much
more because they suffer from a condition called menorrhagia.
And most don't realize there are treatments that can help ease
the problem.
Traditionally, a hysterectomy --
removal of the uterus -- has been the only option available to
doctors to treat the condition. But in recent years, researchers
have pioneered alternatives so the heavy bleeding can often be
eliminated or greatly reduced without radical surgery.
Dr. Philip G. Brooks, a Los Angeles
gynecologist and clinical professor at UCLA's David Geffen School
of Medicine, says menorrhagia is much more than just an annoying
period.
The condition can be disabling,
causing women great difficulty working or doing other daily activities
because the flow is so great. "They wear towels, not menstrual
pads," Brooks says.
About 600,000 hysterectomies are
performed each year in the United States, according to the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and about one-fifth
are done to treat menorrhagia, health experts say.
But in recent years, Brooks and
other physicians have turned to less drastic measures. They include
various types of ablation, procedures in which the lining of the
uterus -- called the endometrium -- is destroyed to control the
excessive bleeding.
Even before ablation is recommended,
however, there are other steps that can be considered, says Dr.
William Parker, a gynecologist at Santa Monica-UCLA Medical Center
in California. He often uses a hysteroscope, a tiny telescope-like
device, to do a visual inspection of the uterine cavity.
"We look to see if there are
any fibroids, polyps and lesions," he says, adding the early
stages of pregnancy can also lead to heavy bleeding.
Many women with menorrhagia are
in the 40- to 50-year-old age bracket, and lack of ovulation during
cycles is a main reason for the bleeding.
If a follow-up test -- such as
an ultrasound -- of the uterine lining shows it's normal, Parker
might prescribe low-dose birth control pills or other medication
to slow the excess bleeding.
If medical treatments fail after
three months or so, Parker says he offers the option of ablation.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration
has approved four methods of ablation in recent years, says Brooks,
who lectured on the topic at the recent annual meeting of the
American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.
Earlier techniques required a doctor
to have specialized training. However, the newer treatments are
easier for doctors to master, Brooks and Parker agree.
One of the newest, called hydrothermablation,
is done on an outpatient basis, and involves the insertion of
an hysteroscope to view the cavity during the procedure. A hot
saline solution is delivered into the uterus through a tube inserted
into the cervix. The water destroys the lining of the uterus,
or most of it, in 10 minutes or so. The type of local anesthesia
and other pain relief used varies, depending on the woman.
Ablation "destroys the blood
vessels and endometrial glands that build up and shed," Brooks
says. Basically, it destroys the uterine lining enough to solve
the bleeding problem but sometimes not enough to stop periods.
He says about 50 percent of women
who undergo ablation no longer have periods; the other 50 percent
continue to have periods, but they are much lighter.
The results of hydrothermablation
are very effective. "We have a 94 percent success rate --
either no period or scant periods," says Brooks, who teaches
courses to train other doctors in the technique.
Women who have ablation should
have completed their childbearing because the uterine lining is
no longer capable of sustaining a pregnancy, doctors say. But
because most women affected by menorrhagia are nearing the end
of their reproductive years, motherhood isn't usually a concern.
Yet even with the high success
rates of ablation techniques, says Parker, some women say to him,
"I don't want a 10 percent risk." And they opt instead
for a hysterectomy.
While a traditional hysterectomy
requires about four to six weeks recovery time, ablation is usually
a day or so, Parker says.
More information
You can find more information
on Menorrhagia
here
For information on menstruation,
see the American
College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. To learn more
about menorrhagia, visit the University
of California, Davis Medical Center.
Reference
Source 101
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