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Secondary Dysmenorrhea

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Secondary Dysmenorrhea - Pain's Later Arrival

⭐ Secondary dysmenorrhea typically begins years after menarche, often after age 25, unlike primary dysmenorrhea.

  • Onset: Usually after age 25.
  • Cause: Underlying pelvic pathology.
  • Pain: Not solely with menses; may be progressive, worsen over time.
  • Associated: Dyspareunia, infertility, Abnormal Uterine Bleeding (AUB).
  • Common Causes: 📌 AEIOU
    • Endometriosis (most common)
    • Adenomyosis
    • Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
    • Uterine Fibroids (Leiomyomas)
    • Ovarian Cysts / Tumors

Secondary Dysmenorrhea - Unmasking the Instigators

Painful menses beginning later in life, after prior pain-free cycles. Identify underlying pathology.

  • Common Causes: 📌 'Endo, Adeno, Fibro, PID, IUD'
    • Endometriosis: Cyclical pain, dyspareunia, infertility. Nodularity.

      ⭐ Endometriosis is the most common cause of secondary dysmenorrhea, characterized by ectopic endometrial tissue.

    • Adenomyosis: Symmetrically enlarged, boggy, tender uterus; menorrhagia.
    • Fibroids (Leiomyomas): Submucosal/intramural. Menorrhagia, pressure. Asymmetrical, firm uterus.
    • Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID): Bilateral pain, fever, cervical motion tenderness.
    • Intrauterine Device (IUD): Especially copper IUDs.

Adenomyosis vs. Endometriosis Comparison

Secondary Dysmenorrhea - Decoding the Distress

  • Painful menses from underlying pelvic pathology.
  • Onset typically >25 years, after prior painless cycles.
  • Pain often starts days before menses, progressively worsens.
  • Associated: Dyspareunia, menorrhagia, infertility, pelvic heaviness/mass.
  • Causes: Endometriosis, adenomyosis, fibroids (leiomyoma), PID, ovarian cysts, cervical stenosis, IUCD (copper).

⭐ Pain in secondary dysmenorrhea often progressively worsens, may start days before menses, and can be associated with other symptoms like dyspareunia or menorrhagia depending on the cause.

Secondary Dysmenorrhea - Pinpointing the Problem

  • History: New onset/worsening pain, often after years of painless menses; note abnormal uterine bleeding (AUB), dyspareunia, infertility.
  • Pelvic Exam: Assess uterine size, shape, mobility, tenderness; adnexal masses; nodularity (e.g., uterosacral ligaments in endometriosis).
  • Investigations:
    • Transvaginal Sonography (TVS): First-line imaging to detect structural causes.
    • MRI: If TVS inconclusive, suspected deep infiltrating endometriosis, or complex masses.
    • Hysteroscopy: For suspected intrauterine pathology (e.g., polyps, submucous fibroids).
    • Laparoscopy: Gold standard for endometriosis/adhesions; diagnostic & potentially therapeutic.

⭐ Transvaginal ultrasonography (TVS) is the initial imaging modality of choice for suspected secondary dysmenorrhea to identify structural abnormalities.

Secondary Dysmenorrhea - Relief Roadmap

  • Goal: Treat underlying cause, manage pain, consider fertility.
  • General Pain Relief: NSAIDs (e.g., Mefenamic acid 250-500 mg TDS).

⭐ Management of secondary dysmenorrhea is cause-specific; hormonal therapies (e.g., OCPs, progestins) are often effective for endometriosis-related pain.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Secondary dysmenorrhea manifests later in life, often after age 25, due to pelvic pathology.
  • Endometriosis is the most frequent cause; adenomyosis and leiomyomas are also common.
  • Pain often starts 1-2 weeks before menses and may be accompanied by dyspareunia, infertility, or AUB.
  • Pelvic examination and transvaginal USG are crucial initial diagnostic steps.
  • Laparoscopy is the gold standard for diagnosing endometriosis or adhesions.
  • Treatment targets the identified underlying cause, not just symptomatic relief an NSAIDs/OCPs may be less effective alone.

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