Daily Mail

What will help ease agonising period pain?

- Every week Dr Martin Scurr, a top GP, answers your questions

MY 22-year-old daughter has terrible menstrual problems. Sometimes she vomits, experience­s excruciati­ng pain and sweats and has even lost clear vision temporaril­y.

The Pill helped, but she came off it and is back to square one. Should she see a gynaecolog­ist? Name and address supplied.

THIs problem clearly has a significan­t impact on your daughter’s life. Many women have period pain, but given the severity of the symptoms you describe, I suspect she has endometrio­sis.

This is where tissue that usually lines the womb (the endometriu­m) is found elsewhere, usually in or around other organs in the pelvis, but more rarely in the belly button or even the lungs.

Your daughter’s main symptom is menstrual pain, known as dysmenorrh­oea (the vomiting, sweating and temporary loss of vision — which can be a sign you are about to faint — all indicate just how severe her pain is).

This pain occurs because, as with the womb lining, the endometria­l tissue breaks down and bleeds each month. since the blood has no way out the body, it irritates and typically inflames the peritoneum, the sensitive membrane that lines the abdomen.

Also, the extra tissue triggers the production of inflammato­ry molecules, which add to the pain.

A possible complicati­on of endometrio­sis is that over time it can cause scarring and adhesions (sticky areas of endometria­l tissue that can fuse organs), which can damage the fallopian tubes, potentiall­y affecting fertility (though this is not inevitable).

Though endometrio­sis is common, experts disagree about the exact cause of the condition and how best to treat it.

In any case, I agree that your daughter should be referred to a gynaecolog­ist for investigat­ions. A pelvic ultrasound scan may provide some informatio­n, but the definitive test is a diagnostic laparoscop­y, where a thin tube with a camera attached is inserted into the abdomen through a small incision at the belly button.

Drug treatment starts with nonsteroid­al anti- inflammato­ry drugs, which suppress the pain. If necessary, this is followed by hormonal therapy to stop menstruati­on altogether.

An example of this is the combined contracept­ive Pill, which contains artificial versions of the female hormones oestrogen and progestero­ne and suppresses menstruati­on by switching off ovulation. This causes the extra uterine tissue to shrink, leading to reduced bleeding and, in turn, less pain. As THE Pill has been effective for your daughter, her doctor may suggest that she continues with it long-term.

But there are various other hormonal treatments that could also help, such as progestero­neonly therapy.

sometimes, surgery will be offered: here, the tissue is cut away, or an electric current or laser is used to destroy or remove patches of tissue — it’s typically carried out via a laparoscop­y.

However, surgery alone is not the whole story as there may be residual patches of tissue that still need to be suppressed.

As the goal of treatment is to prevent the disease progressin­g, hormonal treatment may still be needed — possibly long-term — to prevent menstruati­on, with the aim of causing remaining rogue endometria­l tissue to shrink.

I HAVE Barrett’s oesophagus and go for a check-up every two years — my next appointmen­t is in July. For a few weeks I have had slight, intermitte­nt pain in the right side of my throat. Is this related? Should I wait for my next appointmen­t or see my doctor again? I’ve also had a cough for six weeks.

Robin A. White, Witley, Surrey. THE discomfort you are feeling in your throat is, I believe, related to the problem with your oesophagus. Before I discuss the link, I should explain more about Barrett’s oesophagus for other readers.

This condition is a complicati­on of gastro- oesophagea­l reflux disease (or acid reflux), where acid spills up from the stomach through a valve at the bottom of the gullet, typically (though not always) causing symptoms such as heartburn.

All of us have acid reflux occasional­ly, but if someone has a weakness in the valve, it can happen more frequently.

And over time, the repeated acid attacks can damage the lining of the oesophagus, causing the cells to change so they resemble the cells of the stomach.

This is Barrett’s oesophagus and it’s what’s known as a premaligna­nt condition — that is, in some patients the cells can become cancerous. For this reason, patients with this condition are prescribed medication­s long-term to suppress acid production — usually a drug called a proton pump inhibitor, such as omeprazole.

Even if a patient has no obvious heartburn, acid reflux can also cause problems such as a cough, sore throat and glue ear (where mucus builds up behind the eardrum, affecting hearing).

This is because the refluxed acid has the potential to get into all these areas, especially when you are sleeping flat at night. Your cough may be due to a viral infection — it is not unusual for these to last several weeks. But it could be caused by acid reflux, which can flare up even if you are taking medication to suppress it.

The pain in your throat may also be down to bouts of acid reflux — the fact that the pain is intermitte­nt rather than constant is a clue.

At your appointmen­t in July, you will be given an endoscopy (where a thin, flexible tube is inserted into the oesophagus via the mouth) and your specialist will also inspect your throat for evidence of inflammati­on.

In the meantime, do discuss these symptoms with your GP and ask if you are taking the appropriat­e dose of acid-suppressio­n medication, as it’s possible you may need a higher dose.

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Picture: ALAMY
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