Many cases ofdysmenorrhea are of nervous origin; the cause resides in the central nervous system, and not in the genital organs themselves.
It is a mistake, however, to think that all or even most cases of dysmenorrhea are due to some local trouble, that is, to an inflammation of the ovaries, or a displacement of the womb.
Some are forced to do it, because, if they don't, their dysmenorrhea is worse and the amount of blood they lose is considerably increased.
For amenorrhea and dysmenorrhea it may be combined in equal parts with savin and wild ginger, and take one to two ounces four times a day some days before menstruation.
Dysmenorrhea must follow such carelessness, and the parents are to blame in many cases.
Anyone who has seen the difference between the reaction to menstrual moliminia when patients are in good condition and when they are otherwise run down will realize how much a matter of over-reaction to symptoms dysmenorrhea may be.
With this in mind it is possible to relieve many women who suffer from dysmenorrhea from their discomforts so that they shall only have to bear what is every woman's heritage in the matter.
His conclusion was that the dysmenorrhea was more frequently due to conditions outside of the uterus than in that organ.
There are two forms ofdysmenorrhea that have been the subject of much study.
In Dysmenorrhea it relieves pain and congestion with no hallucinations, constipation or danger of a drug habit.
Certainly there is no warrant for such statements as: “In Painful Dysmenorrhea [sic] Dioviburnia is especially indicated, and its continued use will invariably give relief.
Mechanical dysmenorrhea is that form in which a mechanical impediment exists to the escape of the menstrual fluid.
The treatment of mechanicaldysmenorrhea of course implies removal of the cause.
Girls and women affected with this type of dysmenorrhea are often anemic, hysterical, and not infrequently the victims of malaria, rheumatism, or other diseases which tend to impoverish the blood and reduce nerve vitality.
The pain accompanying mechanical dysmenorrhea is very different from the neuralgic type.
Dysmenorrhea is simply one symptom of the general nervous condition.
In some cases Dysmenorrhea is due to disorders of the general nervous system, and treatment therefore should be sought at the hands of a capable physician.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "dysmenorrhea" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.