Endometrial Biopsy
evaluates for malignancy and hyperplasia and it is a simple, quick, low risk office procedure
endometrial hyperplasia (4)
endometrial hyperplasia risk factors
presentation of endometrial hyerplasia (2)
2. postmenopausal bleeding
complex with atypia is treated with
total hysterectomy
both simple hyperplasia and complex without atypia treatment
progesterone therapy
most common gyn cancer in U.S
-2.5% lifetime risk but best survival of all the cancers
endometrial cancer
Risk of being associated with malignancy or pre-malignancy:
Premenopausal women: 1.7%
Postmenopausal women: 5.4%
endometrial polyps
inside uterine wall & more likely to cause AUB
Adenomyosis
outside uterus & unlikely to cause AUB
Endometriosis
when to think of adenomyosis
dysmenorrhea and menorrhagia
treatments of adenomyosis
2. hysterectomy
having fibroids means you don’t have hyperplasia
fallllse
treatments of submucosal fibroids
2. hysteroscopic resection
treatments of large intramural or subserosal fibroids
fibroids in submucosal
more bleeding
fibroids subserosal
more likely to feel that pain/pressure
Benign endometrial glands and stroma deeply within myometrium with diffusely enlarged uterus
adenomyosis
is the presence of endometrial tissue outside the endometrium and myometrium
Endometriosis
Pathological diagnosis of endometriosis is made by identifying 2 of the following 3 features in a biopsy of the endometriotic focus:
There are 4 theories of pathogenesis for endometriosis:
What is the most common tumor in the female genital tract?
leiomyoma (fibroids)- a benign tumor of smooth muscle cells
leiomyoma sites
most commonly in the myometrium but may arise in other sites in the female genital tract
Subserosal leiomyomas may become
pedunculated.