Cochrane Database Syst Rev
September 2012
Background: Irregular menstrual bleeding may arise due to exogenous sex steroids, lesions of the genital tract or be associated with anovulation. Irregular bleeding due to oligo/anovulation (previously called dysfunctional uterine bleeding or DUB) is more common at the extremes of reproductive life, and in women with ovulatory disorders such as polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). In anovulatory cycles there may be prolonged oestrogen stimulation of the endometrium without progesterone withdrawal and so cycles are irregular and bleeding may be heavy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAbnormal uterine bleeding is an extremely common indication for referral to a gynaecologist. This chapter examines the modes of presentation and the causes of such symptoms, which range from physiological variations to more sinister underlying pathology. A thorough understanding of these causes is required to direct investigation in an appropriate manner.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe integrity of the feto-maternal interface is critical for survival of the conceptus. This interface, consisting of the maternal decidua and the invading placental trophoblast, is exposed to profound changes in oxygen tension during pregnancy. We demonstrate that human endometrial stromal cells become extraordinarily resistant to oxidative stress-induced apoptosis upon decidualization in response to cAMP and progesterone signaling.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMenstruation, or cyclic shedding of nonpregnant endometrial tissue with associated bleeding, occurs only in humans and a few other species. This breakdown of the endometrium in response to falling ovarian progesterone levels is a complex process, characterized by local leukocyte infiltration, expression and activation of matrix metalloproteinases, and apoptosis. Spontaneous decidualization (differentiation) of the stromal compartment precedes the cyclic shedding of the endometrium in various menstruating species but the mechanisms that link these processes are not understood.
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