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September 02, 2010  
EDUCATION CENTER: Clinical Overview

Clinical Overview
Definition
Symptoms Diagnosis and Treatment Explore More

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  • Fibroids

    Clinical Overview
    Reviewed by Jonathan Smith, MD

    Uterine fibroids are benign (non-cancerous) tumors that receive blood supply from the uterine arteries. They are extremely common in women in their late reproductive years, and though they are not life-threatening, for some women who suffer from them, they can cause pain, discomfort, reproductive problems, and in some cases, severe bleeding, requiring treatment.

    Uterine fibroids generally occur in women between the ages of thirty-five and fifty, and are estimated to affect one in four women sometime during the course of their reproductive years. It is likely that an even larger proportion of women have undetected fibroids. Though rarely dangerous, large or multiple uterine fibroids can cause symptoms and complications serious enough to demand treatment.

    There are three types of uterine fibroids. Intramural fibroids are fibroids that grow on or in the uterine wall. Subserosal fibroids grow outside of the uterine cavity, and submucosal fibroids grow inside the uterus. Especially large fibroids may fit into more than one category. The location of fibroids is an important factor in diagnosis and treatment, since types of complications and symptoms caused by fibroids are frequently a result of their location.

    Last updated: Jun-05-07

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  • Tuesday, Jul 17 2007 13:41 EST by erinsmoore

    Friday, Jun 29 2007 15:00 EST by ibuiltmine

    Interact on Fibroids1

    On November 12, skruckel posted:


    Hi all. I'm new to the board and recently had the aforementioned 16 days ago. I started taking long walks after 11 days (feeling SO sluggish ...  

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