UTERINE FIBROIDS: PATHOGENESIS, EPIDEMIOLOGY AND ITS CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS ON HUMAN ENDOMETRIUM FUNCTIONING Authors: Fathima F , AFREEN A, CH. B. PRAVEENA DEVI* AND MAHESHWARI B
ABSTRACT
Uterine fibroids consist of smooth muscle cells and connective tissue. Growth is stimulated
by estrogen. Fibroids arise during reproductive years, grow during pregnancy, and regress after
menopause. Growth spurt can happen in premenopausal years—an ovulatory cycles with irregular
relative estrogen excess. Prevalence estimates for uterine fibroids indicate that they affect 5.4% to
77% of women, depending on the method of diagnosis. A fibroid can be very small and difficult
to feel, especially in an obese woman, or as large as a watermelon. Most gynecologists do not
consider fibroids a problem until they are the size of a 12-week pregnancy or are causing
significant symptoms, such as bleeding and painful menstruation. Hysterectomy has been the
procedure of choice for large fibroid tumors. Approximately 300,000 hysterectomies are
performed per year for fibroid tumors. Hysterectomy is not a benign procedure; in 1975, 1700
deaths occurred in the 787,000 hysterectomies performed.
Keywords: Uterine fibroids, hysterectomies, Pathogenesis, Epidemiology Publication date: 01/01/2025 https://ijbpas.com/pdf/2025/January/MS_IJBPAS_2025_8646.pdfDownload PDFhttps://doi.org/10.31032/IJBPAS/2025/14.1.8646