1 / 13

Amenorrhea

Amenorrhea. Darren Farley, M.D. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology UKSM-Wichita. Definitions and Epidemiology. Primary amenorrhea absence of normal menstruation in a patient without previously established cycles no periods by age 14 with no secondary sex changes

nanda
Download Presentation

Amenorrhea

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. Amenorrhea Darren Farley, M.D. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology UKSM-Wichita

  2. Definitions and Epidemiology • Primary amenorrhea • absence of normal menstruation in a patient without previously established cycles • no periods by age 14 with no secondary sex changes • absence of menarche by age 16 regardless of secondary sex changes • no periods by 2 years after the start of secondary sex changes • < 0.1-2.5% of reproductive age women

  3. Definitions and Epidemiology • Secondary amenorrhea • absence of menses for 3 cycle lengths in oligomenorrhea, or for 6 months after having regular menses • 1-5% of the population

  4. Clinical Presentation • History • milestones, development, diet, exercise, wt change • drug use (antipsychotics, hormones, narcs, anti-HTN’s • systemic disease (hypothyroidism, adrenal insuff., GH excess) • past surgery, glactorrhea, hirsutism • gyn/ob hx (hemorrhage, D&C, infection) • genetic history

  5. Clinical Presentation • Physical • ht, wt, vitals • signs of thyroid dz (protuberant eyes, enlarged gland, puffy face, heat/cold intolerance) • secondary sex changes • thelarche (breast devel): avg. age 10.8 yrs; indication of estrogen exposure • adrenarche (pubic/axillary hair development): avg. age 11 and indicates ovarian and adrenal androgen production and end organ response • decreased breast size or vaginal dryness indication decreasing estrogen exposure (or increasing androgens) • presence of a cervix (confirms presence of a uterus)

  6. Etiology • Primary amenorrhea • gonadal failure is most common cause • uterovaginal agenesis is second most common cause • Anorexia nervosa is the most common cause of amenorrhea overall in teens • Secondary amenorrhea • pregnancy is most common cause • 49-62% have hypothalamic disorders, including PCO • 7-16% have pituitary disorders • 10% have ovarian disorders • 7% have Ashermans syndrome

  7. DDx and Tx in Primary Amenorrhea:2nd sex changes absent, cervix present • 50% of patients • primary ovarian disorders • Turner’s sd; pure gonadal dysgenesis; chromosomal mosaics; structural abnormalities of the sex chromosomes • CNS, hypothalamic, or pituitary failure • anatomic lesions; Kallman’s sd; anorexia nervosa or bulimia; exercise induced; constitutional delay; hyperprolactinemia • Endocrinopathies (17 alpha hydroxylase deficiency)

  8. DDx and Tx in Primary Amenorrhea:2nd sex changes absent, cervix present • Work up includes measuring FSH • if >40 and less than 30y/o • do karyotype • if Y chromosome exists, excise gonads • if 46XX, r/o 17a-hydroxylase deficiency • replace estrogen/progesterone, and if 17a-hydroxylase deficient, replace steroids also • if low, then a problem with the CNS, hypothalamic, or pituitary exists • measure serum prolactin • consider CT • no karyotype needed (all are 46XX) • replace estrogen/progesterone • consider GH • fertility requires assistance

  9. DDx and Tx in Primary Amenorrhea:2nd sex changes present, cervix present • May present w/ primary or secondary amenorrhea • 1/3 of pts with primary amenorrhea have breasts and a uterus, 1/4 of these have hyperprolactinemia • CNS or hypothalamic causes • anatomic lesions (can appear with or without secondary sex changes • drugs affecting prolactin levels (stimulators and inhibitors) • stress, exercise, and eating disorders • PCOS • functional hypothalamic amenorrhea • Pituitary causes • Ovarian causes (elevated gonadotropin and low estrogen) • radiation and chemo; premature ovarian failure; ovarian resistance sd; PCOS; infection; vascular injury; cystetomy • Uterine causes (only group in this category who will show normal endocrine findings

  10. DDx and Tx in Primary Amenorrhea:2nd sex changes present, cervix present • Work up • r/o pregnancy • r/o hyperprolactinemia • if prolactin level elevated, evaluate thyroid function • measure FSH and LH • measure 17a-hydroxylase progesterone and progesterone • do a progesterone challenge test • Treatment • dopamine agonist therapy • combination OCP therapy • estrogen replacement

  11. DDx and Tx in Primary Amenorrhea:2nd sex changes present, cervix absent • androgen insensitivity (testicular feminization sd) • mullerian anomalies or agenesis • work up • karyotype and testosterone level • if nl body hair and female testosterone levels, uterine agenesis is present and pt is sterile • karyotype is to r/o male pseudohermaphrodism • IVP should be done to r/o renal anomalies • may need reconstructive surgery • pts with AI are usually raised as girls (XY) • remove gonads after breast development and epiphyseal closure • replace estrogen

  12. DDx and Tx in Primary Amenorrhea:2nd sex changes absent, cervix absent • <1% of primary amenorrhea • pts are 46XY, but have abnormality in testosterone synthesis • mullerian inhibiting factor causes internal female organs to regress • DDx • 17a-hydroxylase deficiency • 17,20 desmolase deficiency • agonadism • Lab: elevated gonadotropins and low-normal female testosterone levels • Tx: remove testicles and replace estrogen; no need for progesterone

  13. Secondary Amenorrhea • Differential • similar to that of primary amenorrhea with cervix and secondary sex changes present • Work up • r/o pregnancy • r/o hyperprolactinemia • if prolactin level elevated, evaluate thyroid function • measure FSH and LH • measure 17a-hydroxylase progesterone and progesterone • do a progesterone challenge test • Treatment • dopamine agonist therapy • combination OCP therapy • estrogen replacement

More Related