Vaginal bleeding refers to bleeding in females that are either a physiologic response during the non-conceptional menstrual cycle or caused by hormonal or oganic problems of the reproductive system. Vaginal bleeding may occur at any age, but always needs investigation when encountered in female children or postmenopausal women. Vaginal bleeding during pregnancy may indicate a possible pregnancy complication that needs to be medically addressed.
Anatomy
Blood loss
per vaginam (
Latin: from the
vagina) typically arises from the lining of the uterus (
endometrium), but may arise from
uterine or
cervical lesions, the
vagina, and rarely from the
Fallopian tube. During
pregnancy it is usually but not always related to the pregnancy itself. Rarely, the blood may actually arise from the
urinary tract (
hematuria), although the vast majority of women can identify the difference. It can also be a sign of vaginal cancer.
Causes
Bleeding in Children
Bleeding before the expected time of
menarche could be a sign of
precocious puberty. Other possible causes include the presence of a
foreign body in the vagina,
molestation, vaginal infection (
vaginitis), and rarely, a tumor.
Premenopausal women
- Menstruation. Exceptionally heavy bleeding during periods is termed menorrhagia or hypermenorrhea, while light bleeding is called hypomenorrhea.
- If bleeding occurs between periods, this is not necessarily pathological, but it is termed intermenstrual bleeding. If no period can be identified due to the unpredictable bleeding, metrorrhagia is used.
- Dysfunctional uterine bleeding is a common cause of menorrhagia and irregular bleeding. It is due to a hormonal imbalance, and symptoms can be managed by use of the contraceptive pill (although hormonal contraception does not treat the underlying cause of the imbalance). If it is due to polycystic ovary syndrome, weight loss may help, and infertility may respond to clomifene citrate.
- Uterine fibroids (leiomyoma) are benign tumors of the uterus.
- Cervical cancer may occur at premenopausal age, and often presents with "contact bleeding" (e.g. after sexual intercourse)
- Uterine cancer will lead to irregular and often prolonged bleeding.
Pregnant women
During
pregnancy: mild to moderate blood loss may be due to rupture of a small vein on the outer rim of the
placenta. It can also herald a
miscarriage or
ectopic pregnancy, which is why urgent
ultrasound is required to separate the two causes. Bleeding in early pregnancy may be a sign of a
threatened or
incomplete miscarriage.
In the second or third trimester a placenta previa (a placenta partially or completely overlying the cervix) may bleed quite severely. Placental abruption is often associated with uterine bleeding as well as uterine pain.
Postmenopausal women
Any vaginal bleeding after the menopause needs to be medically assessed.
Investigation
The diagnosis can often be made on the basis of the bleeding history, physical examination, and other medical tests as appropriate. Typically a
pregnancy test and additional hormonal tests, a
Pap smear, a
transvaginal ultrasound are needed. If bleeding was excessive or prolanged a CBC may be useful to check for
anemia. Abnormal endometrium may have to be investigated by a
hysteroscopy with a
biopsy or a
dilation and curettage.
The treatment will be directed at the cause. Hormonal bleeding problems during the reproductive years, if bothersome to the woman, are frequently managed by use of oral contraceptive pills.
Complications
A possible complication from protracted vaginal blood loss is
iron deficiency anemia, which can develop insidiously. Eliminating the cause will resolve the anemia, although some women require
iron supplements or
blood transfusions to improve the anemia.
Gynecology | Symptoms