|
Post by Sam on Mar 15, 2016 19:53:17 GMT
Dysmenorrhea is the medical term for the painful cramps that may occur before or during your period. There are two types of dysmenorrhea: primary dysmenorrhea and secondary dysmenorrhea.
Primary dysmenorrhea is another name for common menstrual cramps. Cramps usually begin one to two years after a woman starts getting her period. Pain usually is felt in the lower abdominal area or back. They can be mild to severe.
Common menstrual cramps often start shortly before or at the onset of the period and continue one to three days. They usually become less painful as a woman ages and may stop entirely after the woman has her first baby.
Secondary dysmenorrhea is pain caused by a disorder in the woman's reproductive organs. These cramps usually begin earlier in the menstrual cycle and last longer than common menstrual cramps.
These cramps are caused by contractions in the Uterus, which is a muscle. The Uterus contracts throughout a woman's menstrual cycle. If it contracts too strongly, it can then press against nearby blood vessels which cuts off the supply of oxygen to the muscle tissue of the Uterus. Pain results when part of a muscle briefly loses its supply of oxygen.
~S
|
|