Dr. Dimple Doshi (MBBS, MD, DGO)
Gynecologist & Laparoscopic Surgeon
27+ years’ experience
20,000+ surgeries completed
What if you could identify heavy bleeding in 60 seconds, recognise danger signs early, and get a clear plan; whether medicines will work or, hysteroscopy, or 3D laparoscopy is needed?
At Vardaan Hospital, Goregaon West, Mumbai, I help you understand heavy menstrual bleeding with clarity and calm—because heavy periods are common, but they’re not something you must tolerate.
Heavy periods are also called heavy menstrual bleeding (HMB), menorrhagia, or abnormal uterine bleeding (AUB).
Common terms patients search:
Bleeding is “too much” if it lasts for >7 days, soaks pads hourly for hours, needs night changes, causes big clots, or leads to anemia symptoms. (ACOG)
You likely have heavy menstrual bleeding if any of these happen:
Use this 5-point self-check—if 2 or more are true for 2–3 cycles, you should get evaluated.
Yes—save this and share it with patients:
Normal flow varies, but it should not force hourly pad changes, night flooding, repeated large clots, or progressive anemia.
Small clots can be normal, but recurrent large clots—especially with flooding—need evaluation.
Seek urgent care if you’re soaking a pad every hour for hours, feel faint/very weak, or have heavy bleeding with possible pregnancy.
Go to emergency / same-day assessment if:
Heavy bleeding usually has a treatable cause—fibroids, polyps, adenomyosis, hormonal imbalance, thyroid issues, bleeding disorders, or endometrial changes.
If heavy bleeding is causing fatigue, breathlessness, palpitations, dizziness, or hair fall, iron deficiency anemia is very likely.
Common anemia-linked symptoms:
Most women need a focused evaluation—history, exam, ultrasound, and basic blood tests; hysteroscopy/biopsy is added only when indicated.
Treatment depends on cause + fertility goals—options include iron therapy, medical control, LNG-IUS, hysteroscopy for polyps, and minimally invasive surgery for structural disease.
You need hysteroscopy/biopsy when ultrasound suggests a cavity lesion, bleeding persists despite correct treatment, or risk factors require endometrial assessment.
Typical indications:
Laparoscopic surgery is chosen when fibroids/adenomyosis/endometriosis or persistent symptoms demand definitive treatment—3D vision improves precision and tissue safety.
At Vardaan Hospital, I use Karl Storz Rubina 4K 3D laparoscopy for selected cases because depth perception helps:
Bring 3 months of cycle notes, pad-change pattern, clots/pain history, and prior reports—this makes your diagnosis faster and more accurate.
What to carry:
Ans. If pads are soaked every 1–2 hours, you need double protection, or you must change at night, it’s heavy bleeding—get evaluated.
Ans. Bleeding longer than 7 days is a recognised marker of heavy/prolonged bleeding and should be assessed.
Ans. Large/recurrent clots can indicate heavy bleeding and an underlying cause like fibroids or polyps—especially if clots are quarter-sized or bigger.
Ans. Yes—iron deficiency from heavy bleeding commonly causes fatigue, breathlessness, palpitations, and hair fall.
Ans. If heavy bleeding is severe/early-onset or there’s easy bruising/nosebleeds/family history, evaluation for a bleeding disorder is recommended.
Ans. No—hysteroscopy is used when a uterine cavity cause is suspected or bleeding persists despite correct medical management.