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Vol.11 Issue.1 · January-March 2020
Page: 21-28 Review 662x viewed
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Managing menstruel disorders in primary care

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Published Online: 25 March 2020 · Accepted: 2 February 2020 · Received: 6 November 2019
Doi: 10.15511/tjtfp.20.00121
Cite Code: The Journal of Turkish Family Physician 2020;11(1):21-28
Authors: E. Zeynep Tuzcular Vural 1 · Işık Gönenç 2
1 Haydarpasa Numune Training and Research Hospital, Family Planning Unit, Family Medicine Specialist, Assoc. Professor, Istanbul, Turkey
2 Haydarpasa Numune Training and Research Hospital, Family Planning Unit, Family Medicine Specialist, Spc. Dr., Istanbul, Turkey
Keywords: Abnormal uterine bleeding · disfunctionel uterine bleeding · menstrual disorders
Abstract
References

Abnormal uterine bleeding (AUB) is one of the most common gynecological complaints in clinical practice, effecting 30% of women throughout life. Approximately 2/3 of AUB occurs because of organic reasons. The remaining 1/3 are classified as dysfunctional uterine bleeding (DUB) and are common reasons for uterine bleeding after menarche. When left untreated, DUB can cause serious problems such as deep anemia and heart failure. The role of the family physician is important in the follow-up and treatment of bleeding pathologies which may be the first symptom of genital cancer. DUB is diagnosed when organic pathologies are excluded. 90% of DUB are anovulatory; 90% can be treated with medical treatment. Ovulatory DUB usually heal spontaneously and are resistant to medical treatment. The most commonly used agents in DUB are progestins. Most can be treated with combined oral contraceptives (COCs), hormonal therapy and nonsteroid antinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). The family physician should be aware that AUB can be encountered at least a few times in the life of women from menarche to menopause, be able to make differential diagnosis and administer first-line treatments, to offer the patient different treatment choices and treatment plans, to protect the patient from prolonged bleeding, to prevent recurrence and, if necessary refer the patient to a specialist in secondary –tertiary care centres.

References

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  • Guidelines for the management of abnormal uterine bleeding. SOGC CLINICAL PRACTICE GUIDELINES 2001. https://www.jogc.com/article/S0849-5831(16)31463-X/pdf adresinden 11.10.2019 tarihinde erişilmiştir.
  • Heavy Menstrual Bleeding – Care Pathway and Referral Criteria. https://www.oxfordshireccg.nhs.uk/professional-resources/documents/clinical-guidelines/gynaecology/guidelines-for-heavy-menstrual-bleeding-primary-care-pathway.pdf adresinden 5.01.2020 tarihinde erişilmiştir.
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The Journal of Turkish Family Physician (e-ISSN 2148-550X) is a peer-reviewed national periodical journal published four times a year, quarterly on-line only. The journal can include all scientific, evidence-based articles in both Turkish and English, such as research articles, case reports, reviews, letters to the editor, national and international scientific documents and translations, which are related to general medicine and family medicine and primary health care services.

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