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What will happen if you have myoma?
Myomas affect, with some variability, all ethnic groups and approximately 50% of all women during their lifetime. While some remain asymptomatic, myomas can cause significant and sometimes life-threatening uterine bleeding, pain, infertility, and, in extreme cases, ureteral obstruction and death.
Is myoma life-threatening?
Fibroids can cause heavy bleeding, debilitating abdominal pain, and pelvic pressure. While the complications they cause typically aren’t life-threatening, fibroids can change the structure of your uterus and affect fertility.
Can a myoma be cancerous?
Fibroids are muscular tumors that grow in the wall of the uterus (womb). Another medical term for fibroids is leiomyoma (leye-oh-meye-OH-muh) or just “myoma”. Fibroids are almost always benign (not cancerous). Fibroids can grow as a single tumor, or there can be many of them in the uterus.
What age can have myoma?
Uterine fibroids usually appear in women of childbearing age — generally between 30-40 years old, but they can show up at any age. They’re more common in African-American women than in white women, and they also tend to show up earlier and grow quicker in African-American women. Doctors don’t know why that is.
Can myoma become cancerous?
Fibroids rarely turn into cancer. This is more likely to occur in women after menopause. The most common warning sign of cancer is a rapidly growing tumor that requires surgery.
Which is the most common type of Myoma?
The different types of myomas include: Intramural myomas are the most common type. They are located within the wall of the uterus. Subserosal myomas grow on the outside of the uterine wall and may put pressure on nearby organs (like the bladder) or distort the shape of the uterus if they grow large enough.
Can a Myoma be in the cervix?
Myomas are smooth, non-cancerous tumors that may develop in or around the uterus. Made partly of muscle tissue, myomas seldom develop in the cervix, but when they do, there are usually myomas in the larger, upper part of the uterus as well.
What should I do if I have a Myoma?
1 Hormonal contraception. 2 An intrauterine device. 3 Antifibrinolytic 4 Nonsteroidal agents. 5 If you don’t want to have children, endometrial ablation is another option. 6 Medications called gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist (or GnRH agonists) can shrink fibroids, but they grow back once treatment stops.
What are the symptoms of a uterine myoma?
A myoma (also known as a uterine fibroid or a leiomyoma) is a common noncancerous tumor that grows in or around the uterus. Myomas can range in size and cause symptoms like abdominal pain and heavy menstrual bleeding, but some people do not have symptoms.