Abnormal Bleeding: One Woman'... Video Transcript

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Understanding Abnormal Uterine Bleeding: Part 2
Understanding Abnormal Uterine Bleeding: Part 1
Abnormal Periods: When Should You Worry?
Abnormal Bleeding: A Patient's Perspective
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Abnormal Bleeding: One Woman's Story
Play Videoplay videoTime: 06:31 minutes
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Participants

, Steve Cohen MD, Dean S. Cunningham MD

Summary

Every year, thousands of woman suffering from abnormal uterine bleeding are told that their only option is hysterectomy. Some choose to undergo this complicated and invasive procedure, while others simply choose to live with their condition. But as you'll learn from this patient's story, hysterectomy is not necessarily your only treatment choice.

Webcast Transcript

MARY WAGNER: Welcome to our webcast. I'm Mary Wagner. We're here today to talk about abnormal uterine bleeding from the patient's perspective. Dr. Cohen, would you like to introduce your patient to us?

STEVEN COHEN, MD: Sure. This is Susan Bradshaw, a patient of mine, from last year, who has graciously consented to come in today to tell us a little bit about her story.

SUSAN BRADSHAW: Nice to see you again.

STEVEN COHEN, MD: Thank you. Thank you.

SUSAN BRADSHAW: Well, you know the story, but I came to see you after a series of going to other doctors. About three or so years ago, everything was fine in my life. My period was normal. It's always been very -- you know --light and regular. And it started just sort of intermittently having spotting, not when I was having my period. Then it started to get more regular and then more often and then started getting heavier. So after about almost about two years, I was just like bleeding all the time.

It was very interruptive in my life. I'm a meeting planner, as you know. And I travel a lot and I have kids and I'm normally a very high-energy person. And it pretty much took its toll on me. I had to miss some business flights because I was constantly -- you know -- bleeding and it was very embarrassing. And I finally went to the gynecologist and his story was "Well, you have uterine bleeding. You know what you need to do is have a hysterectomy." And I was not comfortable with that.

So I'm like, okay, well. I remember talking to my -- I remembered that this situation happened to my mother and I called her and I said, what was your story? She said, "Well, I went to the doctor." This is probably about 25 years ago. That was the situation. She was just bleeding all the time and she went to the doctor and he had a hysterectomy.

And I got referred to you. Thank you. And I remember going in and I guess we did the

STEVEN COHEN, MD: Hysteroscopy.

SUSAN BRADSHAW: Yeah, the hysteroscopy and didn't necessarily find anything wrong. You had me come back a couple weeks later to do a shot --

STEVEN COHEN, MD: The depo, the Lupron depo.

SUSAN BRADSHAW: Yeah. We did the shot and then came back four weeks after that and we did the ablation. The first time I went in, it was just absolutely fine. No problem. Just very easy procedure.

And when I went in for the ablation. I was a little nervous about it, but it was very easy. Little anesthetic and was out the same day. By the next day, I was perfectly fine. You said, as a matter of fact, I could take some Advil if I had any pain. But I basically had maybe some very, very mild cramping, but no problems with it. It took care of everything. I'm back to being a normal person and in control of my own body and it not controlling me and having my energy level back. Work is fine. My sex life is fine.

STEVEN COHEN, MD: That's good.

SUSAN BRADSHAW: That was good. It was just great to have the option. I never knew that that was out there. I don't know if a lot of people know that that's out there.

STEVEN COHEN, MD: You bring up some very interesting points. One is that a lot of times as providers we look at life and death situations and major medical diseases and quality of life situations don't impact us as much. So a patient comes in and says, "I'm bleeding all the time." They don't have cancer. They don't have some dreaded disease that is going to kill them so we sometimes don't give it as much due as it deserves. And yet the person who lives with it on a day-to-day basis finds that, you know, it really is.

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