100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached
logo-home
Summary Gynaecology revision notes for medical school $13.66   Add to cart

Summary

Summary Gynaecology revision notes for medical school

 45 views  1 purchase
  • Course
  • Institution

Comprehensive revision notes covering all areas of gynaecology required for medical school final exams and postgraduate exams such as the MSRA. 100+ pages of concise, user-friendly and structured notes with a lot of images to aid your learning and help you efficiently revise. Also features a sectio...

[Show more]

Preview 4 out of 103  pages

  • January 4, 2023
  • 103
  • 2018/2019
  • Summary
  • Unknown
avatar-seller
GYNAECOLOGICAL HISTORY

Menstrual questions Other Hx
• How long is the cycle? • Past obstetric hx
• How long does menstruation last? o Details about previous pregnancies in
• Regular or irregular? chronological order
• Is it heavy? o Ask gestation, weight and delivery
o No. of pads or passage of clots method
• Is it or the days leading up to it painful? o Ask how infant is now
• Intermenstrual bleeding (IMB)? o Any major complications in
• Post-coital bleeding (PCB)? pregnancy or labour?
• Any vaginal discharge? What is it like? • PMHx
• Premenstrual tension? o Previous operations
• Last menstrual period (LMP)? o VTE
• Postmenopausal bleeding (PMB)? o Diabetes
o Lung and heart disease
• Symptoms of anaemia?
o HTN
o Jaundice
Sexual/contraceptive questions
o Any admissions to hospital?
• Sexually active?
• Systems review
• Painful?
o CV
o Penetration? = superficial
o Respiratory
dyspareunia
o Neurology
o Deep inside? = deep dyspareunia
o GI symptoms and urinary
o During or after (delayed)
symptoms more important to
• Contraceptive currently in use? Any different
screen for
types in the past?
• DHx
o Regular medication
Cervical smear questions
o NKDA
• When was her last smear? Should be every 3 years
• FHx
aged 25-49, every 5 years between 50-64 years
o Breast or ovarian ca
o Ever had an abnormal smear?
o DM
o If yes, what was done?
o VTE
o CVD
Urinary/prolapse questions
o HTN
• Frequency?
• SHx
o Normal = 4-7 times per day
o Smoking (RF for many conditions)
• Nocturia
o Alcohol
• Urgency
o Relationships? Home? Support at home?
• Ever leak urine? o What made her come to you about
o Nocturnal enuresis = whilst asleep this problem now? E.g. does she
• How severe? want to get pregnant?
• Any associations (stress) e.g. coughing, lifting, o How does problem affect her life?
urgency Unable to work? Cannot sleep?
• Dysuria? Relationship problems?
• Haematuria? • ICE
• Dragging sensation/feel a mass in/at vagina?

History of presenting complaint
Dysmenorrhoea: - Pill, pregnancy, antibiotics, STDs
- Primary or secondary?
- Relationship to periods Pelvic Pain:
- Site and duration - Usual Questions
- Relieved by menstruation or the pill - Relationship to bodily functions eg menstruation,
defecation, micturition and intercourse.
Vaginal Discharge: - Other symptoms, eg discharge, fever, collapse
- Duration
- Colour Infertility:
- Smell - Ovulation
- Itch - Anatomical problems eg tubal disease
- Blood - Male factors
- Variation

,Presenting the Hx: This is … a … year old (parity) with a (time) history of …, who … (most significant findings on hx). Summarise
whole history after this, and finish in one sentence.

CLINICAL SCENARIOS:

34 year old, heavy periods.
Differential diagnosis:
• Fibroids
• Dysfunctional uterine bleeding (hormonal)
• Adenomyosis (similar pathology to endometriosis, where endometrial lining invades into myometrium)

Key questions:
• How long for
• Menstrual history:
- Cycle length
- Bleeding length
- Quantify
• Dysmenorrhoea e.g. fibroids don’t usually cause pain but adenomyosis causes heavy and painful periods
• Pressure symptoms (bladder/bowel) e.g. fibroids growing large
• Symptoms of anaemia e.g. dizziness, fatigue
• Previous treatments – “Is this the first time you have spoken to a doctor about this?”
• Effect on her life
• Family history – fibroids often run in families.

26 year old, history of lower abdominal pelvic pain.
Differential diagnosis:
• Endometriosis
• Chronic PID
• Non-Gynae (GI or bladder)

Key Questions:
• Pain history (SOCRATES)
• Is it cyclical? If no pattern/association with menstrual cycle then unlikely to be gynaecological in origin
• Bowel or urinary symptoms
• STI and PID history (any vaginal discharge)
• Menstrual history e.g. endometriosis causes pain before period starts
• Social history

60-year-old woman, leakage of urine.
Differential diagnosis:
• Stress urinary incontinence (sphincter problem)
• Urge urinary incontinence (detrusor over activity)
• Mixed incontinence
• Pressure from fibroids/pelvic mass

Key Questions:
• Always begin with asking about duration of symptoms
• Does it occur during:
- Coughing
- Sneezing
- Exertion
- Rules out stress incontinence
• Associated urinary symptoms
- Urgency (urge incontinence)
- Frequency
- Nocturia
- Dysuria à UTI
• Caffeine and fluid intake
• Menstrual history
• Past obstetric history
• BMI
• Smoker/chronic cough/asthma (stress incontinence)

,64-year-old patient presenting with bleeding.
Differential diagnosis:
• Commonest cause is atrophic vaginitis – low oestrogen and vaginal tissue becomes friable and can bleed
• Next commonest cause is polyps which are generally benign and can be either cervical or
endometrial
• Most risky = endometrial cancer. Only 5-10% of patients with post-menopausal bleeding will have cancer.
However, needs to be excluded.

Key Questions:
• Bleeding details
- Timing
- Number of episodes
- Provoked
- Nature
• Endometrial cancer risk factors
- Hyperoestrogenic state
o Early menarche
o Late menopause
o Nulliparity
o Obesity
o Diabetes
o HRT (length and type)
• Patient ICE

32-year-old presents to A&E, she is pregnant with a history of bleeding.
Differential Diagnosis:
• Miscarriage
• Ectopic
• Viable pregnancy

Key Questions:
• LMP
• Nature of bleeding (how severe?)
• Pain (cramping – miscarriage is often bilateral cramping pain or sharp; ectopic is usually sharp pain at one point)
• Previous gynae and obs history (e.g. previous ectopic increases risk of next)
• STI
• Any pregnancy scans
• Remember these patients may be very anxious

GYNAECOLOGICAL EXAMINATION

General
• Effects or, more rarely, causes of gynaecological problems
• Assess general health and incidental disease
• General appearance
• Weight
• Temperature
• BP and pulse
• Anaemia, jaundice or lymphadenopathy should be noted

Abdominal Examination
• Inspect
o Scars – especially just above symphysis pubis and in the umbilicus
o Distribution of body hair
o Irregularities, striae and hernias
• Palpate
o Masses or tenderness
o Palpate down from above umbilicus down to symphysis pubis
• Percuss
o Look particularly for shifting dullness
• Auscultate
o Bowel sounds

, Vaginal Examination
• Inspect
o Coloured areas, ulcers or lumps on vulva
o Evident prolapse at intraoitus
• Digital bimanual examination
o To assess pelvic organs
o Press left hand on abdomen above symphysis pubs and two fingers of right hand inserted into vagina
o Uterus is normally size and shape of a small pear
§ Assess size, consistency, regularity, mobility, anteversion or retroversion and tenderness
o Cervix
§ Hard or irregular
o Adnexa
§ Lateral to uterus on either side, containing tube and ovary
§ Tenderness, size and consistency assessed
§ ? Separate from uterus
o Pouch of douglas
§ Uterosacral ligaments should be palpable
§ Even, irregular or tender?
§ Palpable mass?
• Cusco’s speculum
o Allows inspection of cervix and vaginal walls
o Look for ulceration, spontaneous bleeding or irregularities
o Cervical smear can be taken
• Sim’s speculum
o Better inspection of vaginal walls and prolapse
o Patient positioned in left lateral position with legs partly curled up
o Press one end into the posterior wall to allow visualisation of anterior wall
o Prolapse of the wall or cervix or vaginal vault can be assessed if you ask the patient to bear down
• Rectal examination
o Appropriate if posterior wall prolapse to distinguish between enterocoele and rectocoele
o Also for assessing malignant cervical disease
o Also rectovaginal endometriosis

The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.

Quick and easy check-out

Quick and easy check-out

You can quickly pay through credit card or Stuvia-credit for the summaries. There is no membership needed.

Focus on what matters

Focus on what matters

Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!

Frequently asked questions

What do I get when I buy this document?

You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.

Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?

Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.

Who am I buying these notes from?

Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller MedSchoolRevision. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.

Will I be stuck with a subscription?

No, you only buy these notes for $13.66. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.

Can Stuvia be trusted?

4.6 stars on Google & Trustpilot (+1000 reviews)

79373 documents were sold in the last 30 days

Founded in 2010, the go-to place to buy study notes for 14 years now

Start selling
$13.66  1x  sold
  • (0)
  Add to cart