The endometrium is the lining of the uterus.
Thickening of the womb lining after menopause.
Endometrial hyperplasia is a condition in which the endometrium lining of the uterus is abnormally thick.
Stripe specifically refers to endometrial tissue in your uterus.
If a woman who has already gone through menopause suddenly has bleeding and an ultrasound test shows that her uterine lining is thicker than 4 to 5 mm she may need an endometrial biopsy to make.
Endometrial hyperplasia is a non cancerous benign condition where the lining of the womb becomes thicker.
Symptoms of endometrial hyperplasia are heavy periods bleeding between periods and bleeding after menopause.
Endometrial hyperplasia is caused by a presence of excessive cells in the lining of the uterus.
After menopause you may have too much estrogen and too little progesterone.
There are four types of endometrial hyperplasia.
The types vary by the amount of abnormal cells and the presence of cell changes.
Endometrial hyperplasia thickening of the uterine lining.
You have a higher risk of developing womb cancer if you have this thickening especially if the extra lining cells are abnormal.
Endometrial thickness must be evaluated together with endometrial morphology as well as risk factors for malignancy when considering endometrial sampling.
The uterine lining is called the endometrium.
Endometrium thickening may cause bleeding after menopause but even without bleeding the possibility of endometrial cancer cannot be ruled out.
As a result the endometrium gets thicker and can bleed.
Will stop its monthly thinning and thickening during and after menopause.
It is one of the few organs in the human body that changes in size every month throughout a person s fertile years.