secondary dysmenorrhea
Noun: A type of menstrual pain (dysmenorrhea) that is not a normal part of the menstrual cycle itself, but is instead caused by an identifiable underlying medical condition or disorder within the reproductive system. The pain typically begins earlier in the menstrual cycle and lasts longer than primary dysmenorrhea.
This is a medical term used by healthcare professionals to diagnose and describe a specific gynecological symptom. It is used to distinguish pain caused by a disease from the more common menstrual cramps without an underlying pathology. - The diagnosis shifted from primary to secondary dysmenorrhea after the ultrasound revealed endometriosis. - Secondary dysmenorrhea often requires treatment of the causative condition, not just pain management.
- Her worsening cramps were investigated and diagnosed as secondary dysmenorrhea due to uterine fibroids.
- A key feature of secondary dysmenorrhea is that the painful periods often start years after menarche.
- The doctor explained that the persistent pelvic pain was likely secondary dysmenorrhea caused by pelvic inflammatory disease.
- The term is used in differential diagnosis to categorize the etiology of menstrual pain.
- It is often discussed in contrast to primary dysmenorrhea, which is common menstrual cramping without pelvic pathology.
- Dysmenorrhea (n): The general medical term for painful menstruation, encompassing both primary and secondary types.
- Primary dysmenorrhea (n): Painful menstruation with no identifiable underlying gynecological disease.
- Acquired dysmenorrhea (less common synonym)
- Organic dysmenorrhea (less common synonym)
This term has a single, specific meaning in the medical/gynecological context. It does not have general English usage.
- It is a compound noun. The "secondary" specifies the type of dysmenorrhea.
- It is a non-count noun; one does not typically say "a secondary dysmenorrhea."
- Common causative disorders include endometriosis, adenomyosis, uterine fibroids, pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), and cervical stenosis.
- painful menstruation that is caused by some specific disorder (as endometriosis)