Primary Dysmenorrhea - Period Pain Primer
- Definition: Recurrent, crampy menstrual pain; no underlying pelvic pathology.
- Prevalence: Very common, especially in adolescents and young women; affects up to 50-90%.
- Onset: Typically 6-24 months after menarche, once ovulatory cycles are established.
- Risk Factors: Early menarche (<12 yrs), nulliparity, heavy/prolonged menses, smoking, family history, BMI extremes.
⭐ Key mechanism: Excess endometrial prostaglandins (PGF2α, PGE2) lead to uterine hypercontractility and ischemia.
Primary Dysmenorrhea - Cramp Culprits
- Pathogenesis: Excess prostaglandins (PGF2α, PGE2) from shedding endometrium.
- Action: ↑ myometrial contractility → uterine ischemia → pain.
- Sensitizes nerve endings to pain.
- Leukotrienes: May contribute to inflammation and pain.
- Vasopressin: Potential role in uterine hypercontractility and ischemia.
- Key: Absence of underlying structural pelvic pathology.

⭐ Prostaglandin levels are 2-10 times higher in women with primary dysmenorrhea compared to asymptomatic women during menstruation. This directly correlates with pain severity.
Primary Dysmenorrhea - Symptom Spotlight
- Pain Characteristics:
- Crampy, spasmodic, colicky uterine pain.
- Location:
- Suprapubic, midline lower abdomen.
- May radiate to lower back and inner thighs.
- Timing:
- Begins hours before or just with menstrual onset.
- Peaks within 24 hours of menstrual flow.
- Typically lasts 48-72 hours.
- Associated Systemic Symptoms:
- Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea.
- Fatigue, headache, dizziness, irritability.
- Severity can vary significantly.
⭐ Primary dysmenorrhea often improves after childbirth or with increasing age due to uterine nerve changes or reduced prostaglandin levels after pregnancy-induced uterine denervation or stretching of uterine nerve fibers during childbirth, and decreased prostaglandin synthesis with age related hormonal changes and uterine maturation..
Primary Dysmenorrhea - Spotting Signs
- Diagnosis: Primarily by characteristic history (crampy, midline, lower abdominal pain; starts with or just before menses, lasts 1-3 days).
- Pelvic examination: Typically normal. Key to diagnosis: exclusion of secondary causes.
- Red flags for secondary dysmenorrhea:
- Onset after age 25
- Abnormal uterine bleeding (AUB)
- Dyspareunia, infertility
- Pelvic abnormality on exam
- Lack of response to NSAIDs/OCPs
- Investigations: Usually not required for typical cases. Consider pelvic ultrasound if atypical features or unresponsive to initial therapy.
⭐ Onset of primary dysmenorrhea is typically within 6-12 months of menarche, coinciding with the establishment of ovulatory cycles.
Primary Dysmenorrhea - Taming Torment
- Pathophysiology: Excess endometrial prostaglandins (esp. $PGF_{2\alpha}$) → uterine hypercontractility, ischemia.
- Stepwise Management:
- Non-pharmacological: Reassurance, local heat, exercise, TENS, dietary changes (low fat, Vit B1, E, Mg, Omega-3).
- Pharmacological (1st line): NSAIDs. Start 1-2 days pre-menses or at pain onset; continue 2-3 days.
- Mefenamic acid 500mg TDS
- Ibuprofen 400-600mg TDS-QID
- Naproxen 250-500mg BD
- Hormonal (2nd line/contraception): Combined OCPs, progestins (LNG-IUS, DMPA).
- Surgical (LUNA, PSN): NOT indicated.
⭐ Pain typically starts with menses, lasting 48-72h; pelvic exam is normal.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Primary dysmenorrhea is painful menstruation without underlying pelvic pathology.
- Onset is typically 6-12 months after menarche, coinciding with ovulatory cycles.
- Caused by excess endometrial prostaglandins (PGF2α, PGE2), leading to uterine hypercontractility and ischemia.
- Presents as crampy, colicky lower abdominal pain starting with menses, lasting 48-72 hours.
- Diagnosis is clinical; pelvic examination is characteristically normal.
- NSAIDs are first-line treatment; COCs are effective second-line options.
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