What diseases can cause dysmenorrhea? Dysmenorrhea is a headache for female friends. For women, there are always several days in a month. Dysmenorrhea is a symptom of gynecological diseases, and there are many causes of dysmenorrhea in clinical practice. Let's take a look at which diseases can cause dysmenorrhea?
Dysmenorrhea often occurs in women, so women do not attach great importance to it and only consider it a normal physiological reaction. However, sometimes dysmenorrhea is not just a simple physiological reaction, and some dysmenorrhea may be a pre disease sign, often not valued by women themselves, delaying treatment time.
The pain of dysmenorrhea lasts from one or two days to the entire menstrual period, and some severe patients may also experience symptoms during non menstrual periods. Some women still choose patience and perseverance, which is so painful. Because they believe that dysmenorrhea is not a major disease, some women's symptoms of dysmenorrhea will gradually alleviate, especially from the beginning of menstruation when getting married or giving birth. However, timely treatment is the right choice for those who experience increasingly severe pain for a longer time.
The diseases indicated by dysmenorrhea can be roughly divided into the following categories:
1. Low back pain during menstruation may be caused by posterior uterine or other diseases
2. Menstrual fever and lower abdominal pain may be pelvic inflammatory disease
3. Normal menstrual blood is dark red. If the color of menstrual blood is light tea brown or there is a change in odor, body temperature increases, and lower abdominal pain, it may lead to endometritis
4. If the duration of dysmenorrhea increases, endometriosis may occur
If not treated in a timely manner, the consequences of these dysmenorrhea diseases may be very serious. A patient in his thirties has been enduring menstrual cramps for many years and has found himself suffering from ovarian chocolate cysts. Because she did not realize the severity of dysmenorrhea and did not receive timely treatment until the condition worsened. Although the surgery was successful, she passed away six months later.
In addition, some patients use healthcare products or prompts to alleviate temporary pain, such as drinking a cup of hot milk every night before going to bed, consciously alleviating or even eliminating menstrual pain. In fact, this method is mostly adjuvant therapy because these two foods contain potassium and magnesium, which can alleviate emotional suppression pain, help the body relax, eliminate tension, and reduce stress. However, doctors emphasize that these functions cannot replace medical treatment and treatment.