Dysmenorrhoea
Background
Period pain is usually like a cramp in the lower part of your abdomen. Most
women suffer it to some extent
but about 7 per cent are badly affected. It
may start some days before your period or as you start bleeding.
Girls and
young women usually find it affects them in the first two days, whereas older
women find it gets
worse during their period.
You may find you also
get sickness and diarrhoea, headache, pain travelling down your legs, tiredness
and mood changes.
There are two kinds:
•
Primary ‘spasmodic’ dysmenorrhoea: cramping pain typically affecting
teenage girls,
starts within a year of the first period.
•
Secondary dysmenorrhoea: period pain often associated with a disease condition
such as fibroids, pelvic infection, narrowing of the cervix, endometriosis,
an IUD (contraceptive coil).
Diagnosis
In order to
diagnose the condition correctly your GP may ask questions about the pain and
its relationship to
PMS and other problems. You may have a pelvic examination.
If your GP – or you – is unsure or treatment
has failed, you
may be referred to a gynaecologist for further examination and possibly tests
such as an
ultrasound scan or laparoscopy.
Treatment
Try
simple home remedies such as:
• heat (hot bath and/or hot water bottle);
• massaging your abdomen round and round;
• exercise (fast
walking, cycling, swimming, dancing);
• avoid tension-inducing food
and drink including salt, sugar, tea, coffee and alcohol;
• try vitamin
B6 and evening primrose oil;
• take an over the counter painkiller.
Medical
treatment for primary dysmenorrhoea may include drugs to stop the production of
the chemicals
believed to cause period pain. These are less effective in
secondary. Other options are the oral
contraceptive pill, progestogens, either
by mouth or as an IUD.
(The Mirena coil slowly releases a progestogen directly
into the womb), or sometimes other hormonal treatments.
If period pain is
linked to other conditions, these need to be treated. It is important to seek
help if you
do have concerns.
CAM TREATMENT
The
following treatments may be beneficial:
• Acupuncture
• Massage
• Craniosacral
therapy
• Herbal therapy
• Homeopathy
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