
During their monthly period, many women experience varying degrees of discomfort. However, if your menstrual flow is heavy enough to disrupt your daily life, or even causes dizziness and fatigue, it may not simply be “a heavier period.” It could be what medical professionals call menorrhagia — clinically significant heavy menstrual bleeding. This article provides a comprehensive guide to the definition, common causes, health impacts, and current treatment options for menorrhagia, helping you identify the problem early and seek professional assistance.
What Is Menorrhagia?
Menorrhagia is defined as abnormally heavy or prolonged menstrual bleeding during a woman’s period. While menstrual flow varies from person to person, the medical community has established clear diagnostic criteria for this condition.
How do you know if you have menorrhagia? If you experience any of the following, it may be a sign of heavy menstrual bleeding:
- Extremely frequent pad changes: Needing to change one or more sanitary pads or tampons every hour for several consecutive hours.
- Nighttime disruption: Having to wake up during the night to change sanitary products to prevent leakage.
- Prolonged periods: Menstrual bleeding lasting more than 7 days.
- Large blood clots: Passing blood clots the size of a coin (a quarter) or larger.
- Impaired daily activities: Bleeding so heavily that you cannot carry out normal daily activities, or needing to use double protection (e.g., a tampon plus a pad simultaneously).
- Symptoms of anaemia: Feeling unusually tired, weak, dizzy, or short of breath due to excessive blood loss.
Clinically, if total blood loss exceeds 80 millilitres per menstrual cycle, it is defined as menorrhagia.
Common Causes of Heavy Menstrual Bleeding
Menorrhagia can be triggered by a variety of health conditions. Understanding the underlying cause is the first step towards receiving the correct treatment. Below are the most common contributing factors:
1. Hormonal Imbalance
In a normal menstrual cycle, oestrogen and progesterone maintain a balance that controls the growth of the uterine lining (endometrium). When hormones become imbalanced, the endometrium may grow excessively thick, leading to heavy bleeding when it sheds. This is commonly seen in adolescent girls who have just begun menstruating and in women approaching menopause. Additionally, polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), obesity, and thyroid disorders can all contribute to hormonal imbalance.
2. Uterine Conditions
Many benign uterine conditions are the primary cause of menorrhagia in women of reproductive age, including:
- Uterine fibroids: Benign tumours that grow in the uterine wall, potentially causing heavy or prolonged menstrual bleeding.
- Uterine polyps: Small benign growths on the endometrial lining.
- Adenomyosis: A condition where endometrial tissue grows into the muscular wall of the uterus, often accompanied by severe menstrual cramps and heavy bleeding.
3. Contraceptive Devices
Using a non-hormonal intrauterine device (IUD, commonly known as a copper coil) is associated with increased menstrual blood loss as a common side effect.
4. Medication Side Effects
Certain medications, particularly anticoagulants (such as warfarin and aspirin), can impair blood clotting and lead to heavier menstrual bleeding.
5. Other Medical Conditions
Less common causes include inherited bleeding disorders (such as von Willebrand disease), pelvic inflammatory disease, and even cervical or endometrial cancer. During pregnancy, miscarriage or ectopic pregnancy can also result in significant bleeding.
Health Impacts of Menorrhagia
Ignoring heavy menstrual bleeding over the long term can have serious consequences for a woman’s overall health and quality of life:
| Area of Impact | Specific Manifestation |
| Physical Health | Iron-deficiency anaemia: Excessive blood loss depletes the body’s iron reserves, reducing red blood cell production. Patients may experience pale skin, extreme fatigue, headaches, rapid heartbeat, and shortness of breath. |
| Pain and Discomfort | Severe dysmenorrhoea: Menorrhagia is often accompanied by intense uterine contractions, causing severe menstrual cramps that may require pain medication for relief. |
| Psychological and Lifestyle | Restricted daily life: The constant worry about leakage creates significant psychological stress. Patients may avoid going out, exercising, or socialising, severely impacting their quality of life. |
Diagnosis and Treatment Options
If you suspect you have menorrhagia, it is strongly recommended that you consult a gynaecologist. Your doctor will evaluate your medical history and symptoms, and may arrange blood tests, ultrasound examinations, cervical smear tests, or endometrial biopsies to identify the root cause.
Treatment options for menorrhagia are diverse, and your doctor will develop a personalised plan based on the underlying cause, severity, and your future reproductive goals:
Medication-Based Treatment
- Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs): Such as ibuprofen, which not only relieves menstrual pain but can also modestly reduce blood flow.
- Antifibrinolytic agents: Such as tranexamic acid, taken during menstruation to help reduce bleeding.
- Hormonal therapy: Including oral contraceptive pills, oral progesterone, or a hormone-releasing intrauterine system (such as Mirena), all of which effectively regulate the menstrual cycle and reduce blood loss.
- Iron supplementation: If anaemia has already developed, your doctor will prescribe iron supplements to replenish the body’s iron stores.
Surgical Treatment
If medication proves ineffective, or if the cause is a structural issue (such as significant uterine fibroids), your doctor may recommend surgical intervention:
- Hysteroscopic surgery: Used to remove uterine polyps or submucosal fibroids.
- Endometrial ablation: Destroys the endometrial tissue to significantly reduce or completely stop menstrual bleeding (suitable for women who have completed their families).
- Hysterectomy: In extreme cases, removal of the entire uterus may be necessary. This is a major surgery; afterwards, menstruation will cease permanently, and pregnancy will no longer be possible.
Heavy menstrual bleeding in women is a health warning that should never be ignored. It not only causes daily inconvenience but may also conceal underlying uterine conditions or lead to severe anaemia. If you notice that your menstrual flow is abnormally heavy, do not suffer in silence — consult a medical professional promptly, identify the cause, and receive appropriate treatment. With the help of modern medicine, you can regain control of your health and enjoy a life free from the constraints of excessive menstrual bleeding.