Latest Updates
-
‘The Wire’ and It: Chapter Two Actor James Ransone Dead at 46; Cause of Death Confirmed as Suicide by Hanging -
Fan Frenzy Crosses The Line: Samantha Ruth Prabhu Mobbed At Store Launch Days After Nidhhi Agerwal Incident -
Newlywed Samantha Ruth Prabu Transforms A Silk Saree Into a Style Moment -
Bladder on Hold: Expert Explains The Indian Habit That’s Hurting Urinary Health -
National Mathematics Day 2025: How India Marks Ramanujan’s Birth Anniversary, Know The Story Of 1729 -
Daily Horoscope, Dec 22, 2025: Libra to Pisces; Astrological Prediction for all Zodiac Signs -
Mahayuti Sweeps Maharashtra Local Body Polls, BJP Emerges Largest Party -
The World’s First Harry Potter-Themed Hotel Is All Set to Open In Europe -
Dhurandhar 16 Days Collection | Dhurandhar Beats Jawan, Stree 2 | Dhurandhar 500cr | Dhurandhar Day 16 Collection | Dhurandhar Box Office Collection Day 17 Prediction (December 21, 2025) | Dhurandhar Third Weekend Collection Prediction | Dhurandhar Today Collection -
How to Dress Well This Holiday Season Without Overthinking It
menstruation Treatment
NEW YORK, June 13 (Reuters) Endometrial ablation, a treatment for excessive menstruation or ''menorrhagia,'' appears to be effective in all women, including those who use blood thinners or have underlying bleeding disorders, new research suggests.
Endometrial ablation works by destroying the lining of the uterus with heat, electricity or freezing. Numerous reports have shown endometrial ablation to be useful in treating menorrhagia, even severe forms, in the general population, but relatively few studies have looked at its use in women with disorders, such as thrombocytopenia or von Willebrand disease, that make them prone to bleeding.
To investigate, Dr Abimbola O Famuyide and colleagues, from the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, studied the outcomes of endometrial ablation in a reference group of 111 women and in 34 women receiving the blood thinner warfarin (Coumadin) and 7 with blood disorders.
The new findings appear in the journal Obstetrics and Gynecology.
The subjects underwent the procedure at the researchers' center between 1995 and 2005. The characteristics of the two groups prior to treatment were comparable, the report indicates.
The rates of hysterectomy or the need to repeat the procedure in the groups were similar: 5 per cent in the blood disorders group and 7 per cent in the reference group.
The time to treatment failure was also not significantly different in the groups. Procedure-related complications were uncommon, generally minor, and occurred with similar frequency in each group.
This
is
the
first
and
largest
study
to
address
the
use
of
endometrial
ablation
in
a
growing
population
of
high-risk
women
with
excessive
menstruation
or
bleeding
disorders,
the
authors
conclude.
''Endometrial
ablation
appears
to
be
an
effective
treatment
option
for
these
women.



Click it and Unblock the Notifications











