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D&C — Dilatation and Curettage in Goregaon West, Mumbai: Safe Uterine Evaluation, Endometrial Sampling & Miscarriage Care

Author:

Dr. Dimple Doshi (MBBS, MD, DGO)
Lady Gynecologist & Laparoscopic Surgeon
27+ years’ experience
20,000+ surgeries completed

Being advised a D&C can feel worrying, especially if you have heavy bleeding, thickened endometrium, postmenopausal bleeding, retained products, or miscarriage-related concerns.
Many women worry whether D&C is painful, whether it is safe, whether it affects future pregnancy, or whether medicines can avoid the procedure.
In my clinical experience, D&C should be advised only when it is medically meaningful, after clear diagnosis, counselling, and discussion of alternatives.
This guide explains why D&C is done, how it is performed, recovery, risks, fertility concerns, biopsy reports, and when to consult a gynecologist.

What Is D&C?

D&C means dilatation and curettage, a procedure where the cervix is gently opened and tissue from inside the uterus is removed or sampled.

D&C stands for Dilatation and Curettage.

It is a gynecological procedure in which:

  • the cervix is gently opened, called dilatation
  • the inner lining or contents of the uterus are removed or sampled, called curettage

D&C may be done to:

  • diagnose the cause of abnormal uterine bleeding
  • remove retained pregnancy tissue
  • treat selected uterine bleeding problems
  • obtain tissue for histopathology
  • evaluate thickened endometrium
  • manage incomplete or missed miscarriage in selected cases

D&C can be diagnostic, therapeutic, or both depending on the woman’s condition.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
D&C should not be feared, but it should also not be done casually. The right decision comes from proper diagnosis, clear counselling, safe technique, and careful follow-up.

D&C may be done for abnormal bleeding, thickened endometrium, postmenopausal bleeding, miscarriage, retained products, or endometrial sampling.

D&C may be advised for different gynecological and pregnancy-related reasons.

Common reasons include:

  • abnormal uterine bleeding
  • heavy menstrual bleeding
  • irregular or prolonged bleeding
  • bleeding between periods
  • postmenopausal bleeding
  • thickened endometrium on ultrasound
  • missed miscarriage
  • incomplete miscarriage
  • retained products of conception
  • diagnostic endometrial sampling
  • suspicion of endometrial hyperplasia or malignancy

The purpose is to either remove tissue, collect tissue for diagnosis, or both.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Before D&C, it is important to understand the exact reason. The same procedure may be used for different conditions, but the decision-making is different.

D&C may be considered when abnormal uterine bleeding needs tissue diagnosis, especially if bleeding is persistent, heavy, or linked to thickened endometrium.

D&C may be considered if you have:

  • heavy menstrual bleeding
  • irregular bleeding
  • prolonged bleeding
  • bleeding between periods
  • postmenopausal bleeding
  • thickened endometrium on ultrasound
  • failed medical treatment for bleeding
  • suspicion of endometrial hyperplasia or malignancy

In such cases, D&C helps obtain endometrial tissue for histopathology.

Histopathology can help identify:

  • hormonal endometrial pattern
  • endometrial polyp
  • endometrial hyperplasia
  • atypia
  • malignancy
  • infection-related changes

A. Conservative Treatment

Non-surgical management options include:

  • Pain Management: Medications to control pain and inflammation.

  • Bleeding Control: Drugs such as tranexamic acid to reduce heavy bleeding.

  • Hormonal Therapy: Options such as:

    • Hormonal intrauterine devices (e.g., Mirena)

    • Progesterone-based oral medications

B. Surgical Management

When conservative treatments are ineffective, surgical intervention may be required.

i. Uterus-Sparing Surgery 

    1. Adenomyomectomy– Surgical removal of the adenomyotic tissue while preserving the uterus.
    2. Microwave Ablation (MWA) for Adenomyosis: is an emerging minimally invasive treatment option that uses microwave energy to generate heat and destroy abnormal adenomyotic tissue while preserving the uterus.

ii. Non-Uterus Sparing Surgery (Hysterectomy)

  • Recommended for women who have completed their families and no longer wish to retain the uterus.
  • Complete removal of the uterus provides a permanent cure for adenomyosis.

D&C may help evaluate thickened endometrium by collecting uterine lining tissue to rule out polyp, hyperplasia, atypia, or cancer.

A thickened endometrium may need evaluation, especially in:

  • perimenopausal women
  • postmenopausal women
  • women with irregular bleeding
  • women with PCOS or chronic anovulation
  • women with obesity or diabetes
  • women using unopposed estrogen
  • women with recurrent abnormal bleeding

D&C may help rule out:

  • endometrial polyp
  • endometrial hyperplasia
  • atypical hyperplasia
  • endometrial cancer
  • hormonal endometrial changes

A thickened endometrium does not always mean cancer, but it should be evaluated properly when symptoms or risk factors are present.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
A sonography report showing thickened endometrium should be interpreted with age, bleeding pattern, menopause status, and risk factors.

D&C or suction evacuation may be advised after missed or incomplete miscarriage when tissue remains, bleeding is heavy, infection risk exists, or medicines fail.

D&C or suction evacuation may be advised when:

  • pregnancy has stopped growing
  • miscarriage is incomplete
  • heavy bleeding is present
  • retained pregnancy tissue is suspected
  • infection risk is present
  • medical management has failed
  • the patient prefers surgical completion after counselling

In many early pregnancy-loss cases, options may include:

  • expectant management
  • medical management
  • surgical evacuation

The best option depends on:

  • bleeding
  • infection signs
  • gestational age
  • ultrasound findings
  • patient preference
  • clinical safety

For related care, add internal link to Missed Miscarriage Care.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Miscarriage-related D&C should be handled with both medical safety and emotional sensitivity. It is not only a procedure; it is also a difficult experience for many women.

Retained products of conception means pregnancy tissue remains inside the uterus after miscarriage, abortion, delivery, or incomplete evacuation.

Retained products may occur after:

  • miscarriage
  • medical abortion
  • delivery
  • MTP
  • incomplete evacuation

Symptoms may include:

  • persistent bleeding
  • heavy bleeding
  • fever
  • pelvic pain
  • foul-smelling discharge
  • thickened irregular endometrium on ultrasound
  • vascular retained tissue on Doppler

D&C or suction evacuation may be advised when retained tissue is significant or symptomatic.

Treatment should not be delayed if there is heavy bleeding, infection, or clinical instability.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Persistent bleeding after miscarriage, abortion, or delivery should not be ignored. Ultrasound helps decide whether tissue remains and whether treatment is needed.

D&C may be advised in postmenopausal bleeding when endometrial sampling is needed to rule out hyperplasia, atypia, or cancer.

Bleeding after menopause should always be evaluated.

D&C or endometrial sampling may be advised if there is:

  • postmenopausal bleeding
  • thickened endometrium
  • suspicious ultrasound finding
  • inadequate office biopsy
  • recurrent bleeding
  • risk factors for endometrial cancer

Postmenopausal bleeding does not always mean cancer.

But it should never be ignored.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Even one episode of bleeding after menopause should be checked. The goal is not to frighten you, but to rule out serious causes early.

Diagnostic D&C collects tissue for diagnosis, while therapeutic D&C removes retained tissue or helps treat selected bleeding problems.

Type

Purpose

Common Examples

Diagnostic D&C

To collect tissue for diagnosis

Abnormal bleeding, thickened endometrium, postmenopausal bleeding

Therapeutic D&C

To treat or remove tissue

Incomplete miscarriage, retained products, selected heavy bleeding cases

Sometimes, the same D&C can be both diagnostic and therapeutic.

For example, in abnormal bleeding, tissue may be removed and also sent for histopathology.

Endometrial biopsy is usually a smaller office-based sample, while D&C collects more tissue and is usually done as a minor procedure.

Point

Endometrial Biopsy

D&C

Setting

Often OPD-based

Usually minor OT / day-care procedure

Anesthesia

Usually minimal or none

Usually anesthesia or sedation

Tissue sample

Small sample

More tissue can be obtained

Use

Screening / diagnosis

Diagnosis and treatment in selected cases

Best for

Many abnormal bleeding evaluations

When more complete sampling or evacuation is needed

Your gynecologist decides the best method based on:

  • age
  • bleeding pattern
  • ultrasound findings
  • cervical accessibility
  • pain tolerance
  • clinical suspicion
  • need for evacuation

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Not every woman needs D&C for diagnosis. In some cases, office biopsy or hysteroscopy-guided biopsy may be more suitable.

Hysteroscopy is often more precise for focal lesions because it allows direct visualization of the uterine cavity, unlike blind D&C.

In many modern situations, hysteroscopy-guided biopsy or hysteroscopic removal may be more precise than blind D&C.

This is especially true when ultrasound suggests:

  • endometrial polyp
  • submucous fibroid
  • focal lesion
  • recurrent abnormal bleeding
  • failed previous sampling
  • persistent thickened endometrium

Hysteroscopy allows the doctor to directly see inside the uterine cavity.

D&C still has a role, but the choice should be individualized.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
If the ultrasound suggests a polyp or focal lesion, hysteroscopy may help target the exact area better than blind sampling.

D&C is usually done under anesthesia or sedation, where the cervix is gently dilated and uterine tissue is removed or sampled.

The usual steps include:

  • preoperative evaluation
  • consent and explanation
  • anesthesia or sedation
  • speculum examination
  • cervix gently dilated
  • curette or suction cannula introduced into the uterus
  • endometrial tissue or uterine contents removed
  • tissue sent for histopathology when required
  • recovery monitoring
  • discharge advice and follow-up

D&C is usually a short procedure, but the full hospital stay may include preparation, anesthesia recovery, observation, and discharge instructions.

D&C is usually done under anesthesia or sedation, so significant pain is not expected during the procedure.

During the procedure, you should not feel significant pain because anesthesia or sedation is usually given.

After the procedure, you may have:

  • mild cramping
  • lower abdominal discomfort
  • light bleeding
  • mild tiredness
  • backache

These symptoms usually settle with rest, medicines, and proper post-procedure care.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Fear of pain is very common before D&C. Most women tolerate the procedure well when it is planned with proper anesthesia and counselling.

D&C itself is usually short, but patients may stay for a few hours for preparation, anesthesia recovery, monitoring, and discharge advice.

The procedure itself is usually short.

Most patients stay for a few hours for:

  • preoperative preparation
  • procedure
  • recovery from anesthesia
  • monitoring of bleeding and vitals
  • discharge instructions

Some patients may need longer observation depending on:

  • bleeding
  • medical condition
  • pregnancy-related indication
  • anemia
  • anesthesia factors

Before D&C, your doctor may advise ultrasound, blood tests, anesthesia fitness, fasting, medicine review, and informed consent.

Before D&C, you may be advised:

  • pregnancy test if relevant
  • CBC
  • blood group and Rh typing if pregnancy-related
  • thyroid or hormonal tests if indicated
  • ultrasound pelvis
  • fitness for anesthesia
  • fasting if anesthesia is planned
  • review of blood thinners
  • diabetes and BP control if applicable
  • consent after explanation of risks and alternatives

Tell your doctor if you have:

  • fever
  • foul-smelling discharge
  • bleeding disorder
  • heart disease
  • uncontrolled diabetes
  • severe anemia
  • drug allergy
  • previous uterine surgery
  • suspicion of pregnancy
  • Rh-negative blood group

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Please bring ultrasound reports, previous prescriptions, blood reports, pregnancy records, and medication details. This helps plan D&C more safely.

Recovery after D&C usually involves mild cramps, light bleeding, rest, medicines, and follow-up to review symptoms or biopsy report.

After D&C, you may experience:

  • mild cramps for 1–2 days
  • light bleeding or spotting
  • mild weakness due to anesthesia
  • emotional sensitivity after miscarriage-related D&C
  • period-like discomfort

General recovery advice may include:

  • rest on the day of procedure
  • take medicines as prescribed
  • use sanitary pads, not tampons
  • avoid intercourse until advised
  • avoid swimming or tub bath for a few days
  • avoid heavy exercise for a short period
  • attend follow-up visit
  • collect and discuss histopathology report

Most women can return to routine work in a few days depending on the indication, anesthesia, bleeding, and general health.

After D&C, urgent medical care is needed for heavy bleeding, fever, severe pain, foul discharge, dizziness, fainting, or worsening symptoms.

Contact your doctor urgently if you have:

  • heavy bleeding soaking pads rapidly
  • fever
  • severe abdominal pain
  • foul-smelling vaginal discharge
  • dizziness or fainting
  • persistent vomiting
  • increasing pain instead of improving pain
  • no reduction in bleeding
  • passing large clots repeatedly
  • periods not returning as expected after the procedure

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Light spotting and mild cramps can be expected, but fever, foul discharge, heavy bleeding, or worsening pain should be reported promptly.

D&C is generally safe when done for the right indication, but rare risks include bleeding, infection, perforation, cervical injury, and adhesions.

Possible risks include:

  • bleeding
  • infection
  • uterine perforation
  • cervical injury
  • incomplete evacuation
  • need for repeat procedure
  • anesthesia-related risk
  • intrauterine adhesions, rarely
  • Asherman syndrome, rarely

These risks are uncommon but should be discussed before the procedure.

Risk can be reduced through:

  • correct indication
  • ultrasound-based planning
  • sterile technique
  • careful cervical dilatation
  • gentle uterine handling
  • appropriate follow-up

A single uncomplicated D&C usually does not affect future fertility, but repeated curettage or infection may rarely cause uterine adhesions.

In most women, a properly performed single D&C does not affect future fertility.

However, repeated curettage or infection after the procedure can rarely lead to intrauterine adhesions, also called Asherman syndrome.

This may cause:

  • reduced menstrual flow
  • painful periods
  • infertility
  • recurrent miscarriage
  • difficulty with implantation

This is why D&C should be done only when clinically justified and with careful technique.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Fertility-conscious care means avoiding unnecessary D&C, using gentle technique, and following up if periods become unusually scanty afterward.

Periods usually return within a few weeks after D&C, depending on the reason for the procedure and hormonal recovery.

Your next period may come within a few weeks, depending on the reason for D&C.

After miscarriage-related D&C, timing depends on:

  • gestational age
  • hCG decline
  • hormonal recovery
  • whether pregnancy tissue was completely removed
  • stress and general health

Your first period may be:

  • slightly early or delayed
  • heavier than usual
  • lighter than usual
  • associated with mild cramps

If periods do not return as expected, consult your gynecologist.

D&C after miscarriage can be emotionally difficult, so compassionate support, reassurance, and future pregnancy counselling are important.

A D&C after miscarriage is not only a physical procedure.

It can be emotionally difficult.

You may feel:

  • sadness
  • guilt
  • shock
  • anxiety
  • fear about future pregnancy
  • confusion about why it happened

Please remember: most miscarriages happen due to chromosomal or biological reasons and are not caused by something you did wrong.

At Vardaan Hospital, care includes medical safety as well as emotional sensitivity.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Please do not blame yourself after a miscarriage. Most early losses are not caused by anything the mother did or did not do.

Tissue removed during D&C may be sent for histopathology to confirm the diagnosis and guide further treatment.

Histopathology helps identify:

  • normal endometrium
  • hormonal pattern
  • endometrial polyp
  • hyperplasia
  • atypia
  • malignancy
  • products of conception
  • molar pregnancy
  • infection-related changes

In selected miscarriage cases, further testing may be advised if there is recurrent pregnancy loss or suspicious tissue appearance.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Please collect and review your histopathology report. The procedure is not complete until the report has been discussed and the next step is clear.

Alternatives may include observation, medicines, office biopsy, hysteroscopy-guided biopsy, hysteroscopic removal, hormonal treatment, or surgery.

Depending on the condition, alternatives may include:

  • observation
  • medicines for bleeding control
  • medical management of miscarriage
  • office endometrial biopsy
  • hysteroscopy-guided biopsy
  • hysteroscopic polyp removal
  • hormonal treatment
  • LNG-IUS for selected bleeding cases
  • myomectomy in selected structural causes
  • hysterectomy in selected structural causes

The right choice depends on:

  • diagnosis
  • age
  • fertility goals
  • bleeding severity
  • ultrasound findings
  • patient preference
  • clinical safety

D&C or surgical evacuation should not be delayed in heavy bleeding, infection, septic miscarriage, severe anemia, retained products, or suspicious endometrium.

D&C or surgical evacuation may need timely planning if there is:

  • heavy bleeding
  • hemodynamic instability
  • suspected retained products with infection
  • septic miscarriage
  • severe anemia with ongoing bleeding
  • suspicion of molar pregnancy
  • failed medical management
  • persistent postmenopausal bleeding with suspicious endometrium
  • incomplete miscarriage with significant retained tissue

In these cases, delay may increase health risk.

D&C myths can create unnecessary fear; D&C is not always major surgery, painful, fertility-damaging, or required for every bleeding case.

Myth

Fact

“D&C is always a major surgery.”

It is usually a minor day-care gynecological procedure.

“D&C is needed for every heavy bleeding case.”

No. Many cases can be treated medically or evaluated by biopsy or hysteroscopy.

“D&C always affects fertility.”

A single properly performed D&C usually does not affect fertility.

“D&C cleans the uterus permanently.”

D&C treats or samples the current lining; it does not prevent all future bleeding problems.

“D&C is always painful.”

It is usually done under anesthesia or sedation.

“D&C after miscarriage means future pregnancy will be difficult.”

Most women conceive normally after recovery.

“Histopathology is unnecessary.”

Tissue testing is important in many diagnostic D&C cases.

Dr. Dimple Doshi provides ethical, diagnosis-based, fertility-conscious D&C guidance and care in Goregaon West, Mumbai.

At Vardaan Hospital, Goregaon West, Dr. Dimple Doshi provides:

  • 27+ years of gynecology experience
  • ethical and clear explanation
  • proper diagnosis before procedure
  • sonography-based planning
  • day-care gynecological procedure support
  • safe anesthesia coordination
  • histopathology-based follow-up
  • fertility-conscious decision-making
  • emotional support in miscarriage care
  • personalized guidance for abnormal bleeding

The focus is not to perform D&C unnecessarily.

The focus is to advise it only when it is medically meaningful.

Vardaan Hospital offers private, women-focused gynecology care, day-care procedure support, and follow-up guidance in Goregaon West, Mumbai.

Patients choose Vardaan Hospital for:

  • convenient Goregaon West location
  • accessibility for Malad, Jogeshwari, Kandivali, Andheri, and nearby suburbs
  • senior lady gynecologist consultation
  • privacy-focused counselling
  • ultrasound-based planning
  • safe day-care procedure support
  • anesthesia coordination
  • histopathology follow-up
  • miscarriage care with emotional sensitivity
  • clear post-procedure instructions

D&C cost depends on consultation, ultrasound, indication, anesthesia, hospital stay, histopathology, medicines, and follow-up needs.

Cost may vary depending on:

  • consultation
  • ultrasound
  • blood tests
  • pregnancy-related or non-pregnancy-related indication
  • anesthesia type
  • procedure type
  • day-care or longer observation
  • histopathology
  • medicines
  • Rh injection if pregnancy-related and needed
  • follow-up visits

For exact cost guidance, consultation and report review are required first.

D&C should be done only when medically justified, with proper counselling, safe technique, tissue testing when needed, and careful follow-up.

The most important points are:

  • D&C means dilatation and curettage.
  • It may be diagnostic, therapeutic, or both.
  • It is not needed for every heavy bleeding case.
  • Hysteroscopy may be better for focal lesions like polyps.
  • D&C may be needed for retained products or miscarriage care.
  • Tissue may be sent for histopathology.
  • A single uncomplicated D&C usually does not affect fertility.
  • Rarely, infection or repeated curettage may cause adhesions.
  • Follow-up is important after the procedure.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
D&C should be chosen with clarity, not fear. Always ask why it is needed, what alternatives exist, and what follow-up is required.

Q1. What is D&C?

Ans. D&C means dilatation and curettage.

It is a procedure where the cervix is gently opened and tissue from inside the uterus is removed or sampled.

Q2. Why is D&C done?

Ans. D&C may be done for abnormal uterine bleeding, thickened endometrium, postmenopausal bleeding, missed miscarriage, incomplete miscarriage, retained products of conception, or diagnostic endometrial sampling.

Q3. Is D&C painful?

Ans. D&C is usually done under anesthesia or sedation, so pain during the procedure is minimal.

Mild cramps may occur afterward.

Q4. Is D&C safe?

Ans. D&C is generally safe when done for the right indication with proper care.

Rare risks include bleeding, infection, uterine perforation, cervical injury, and intrauterine adhesions.

Q5. How long does recovery take after D&C?

Ans. Most women recover within a few days.

Light bleeding and mild cramps may occur for a short time.

Q6. Can D&C affect future pregnancy?

Ans. A single uncomplicated D&C usually does not affect future fertility.

Repeated curettage or infection can rarely cause intrauterine adhesions.

Q7. When will periods return after D&C?

Ans. Periods usually return within a few weeks, depending on the reason for D&C and hormonal recovery.

If periods do not return as expected, consult your gynecologist.

Q8. Is D&C needed for every miscarriage?

Ans. No. Some miscarriages can be managed expectantly or medically.

D&C is advised when clinically needed or when the patient prefers surgical management after counselling.

Q9. Is hysteroscopy better than D&C?

Ans. Hysteroscopy is better when a focal lesion like polyp or submucous fibroid is suspected because it allows direct visualization.

D&C may still be useful in selected cases.

Q10. Why is tissue sent for biopsy after D&C?

Ans. Histopathology helps confirm the diagnosis, such as hormonal endometrium, polyp, hyperplasia, products of conception, molar pregnancy, or rarely malignancy.

Q11. Can I go home the same day after D&C?

Ans. Most patients can go home the same day after recovery from anesthesia, depending on bleeding, vitals, and medical condition.

Q12. When should I call the doctor after D&C?

Ans. Call your doctor if you have heavy bleeding, fever, severe pain, foul-smelling discharge, dizziness, or worsening symptoms.

Conclusion

D&C, or dilatation and curettage, is a commonly performed gynecological procedure used for selected diagnostic and therapeutic reasons, including abnormal uterine bleeding, thickened endometrium, postmenopausal bleeding, retained products, missed miscarriage, incomplete miscarriage, or endometrial sampling.

In my clinical experience, women feel calmer when they understand why D&C is advised, whether alternatives are possible, what tissue testing means, and how recovery is expected.

At Vardaan Hospital, Goregaon West, Mumbai, Dr. Dimple Doshi provides ethical D&C guidance, ultrasound-based planning, safe day-care gynecological procedure support, miscarriage-related care, histopathology follow-up, and fertility-conscious counselling.

D&C should not be feared, but it should also not be done casually.
The right decision comes from proper diagnosis, clear counselling, safe technique, and careful follow-up.
Consult Dr. Dimple Doshi at Vardaan Hospital, Goregaon West, Mumbai for safe uterine evaluation and D&C guidance.

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