Fibroids 101: Do They Need to Be Removed?
Fibroids 101: Do They Need to Be Removed?
Topic: Gynaecology
Uterine Fibroids (Leiomyomas) are non-cancerous growths of the uterus muscle. They are incredibly common—up to 70% of women will have one by age 50.
The word “tumor” scares patients. But fibroids are almost never cancer (<0.1%). The decision to treat them depends entirely on Location and Symptoms.
Types of Fibroids
- Subserosal (Outside the wall): Bulge outward. Usually painless unless they get huge and press on the bladder.
- Intramural (Inside the muscle): The most common. Can cause heavy bleeding if large.
- Submucosal (Inside the cavity): The Troublemakers. Even a tiny one (1-2 cm) here can act like a natural IUD, preventing pregnancy and causing horrific bleeding.
When to Treat
You generally do NOT need surgery if:
- They are small (<4-5 cm).
- You have no symptoms (no pain, no heavy bleeding).
- You are near menopause (they shrink after menopause).
You DO need to consider treatment if:
- Anemia: Your periods are so heavy you are losing blood faster than you can make it.
- Pressure: You have to pee every hour (bladder pressure) or look 5 months pregnant.
- Fertility: It is distorting the cavity (Submucosal).
Treatment Options
- Meds: Tranexamic acid (to stop bleeding).
- Procedure: Uterine Artery Embolization (UAE) cuts off the blood supply to shrink them.
- Surgery: Myomectomy (removes fibroid, keeps uterus) or Hysterectomy (removes uterus).
Don’t let a fibroid dictate your life. If it is bleeding you dry, treat it.