How to treat menopausal endothelial thickening

Endometrial thickening during menopause can be treated with estrogenic drugs such as progesterone and dydrogesterone, or with surgery such as hysteroscopy and curettage. Endometrial thickening during menopause may be caused by endocrine disorders, or endometrial polyps, or even malignant tumors, etc. The specific treatment should be judged by professional doctors according to the condition, and should not be used by oneself in order to avoid delaying the condition. 1. Medication: endometrial thickening caused by endocrine disorders during menopause and irregular menstruation may be accompanied by irregular vaginal bleeding. If the bleeding is not serious, you can use drugs such as dextroprogesterone tablets and progesterone capsules to treat the condition, but you need to follow the doctor’s instructions to take them, as abnormal bleeding may occur if you take them in an improper way. 2. Surgical treatment: If the endometrium is obviously thickened or the bleeding is heavy, hysteroscopy, curettage and other methods of endometrial biopsy are needed, and the purpose of stopping bleeding can be achieved in an emergency at the same time. If the pathology shows endometrial polyps, endometrial hyperplasia, endometrial cancer, etc., endometrial polyp removal, hysterectomy, etc., or supplemented with progesterone and other progesterone drugs to inhibit endometrial hyperplasia. When women find endometrial thickening or menstrual abnormalities during menopause, they should go to the hospital in time for examination and diagnosis, and take medication under the guidance of a professional physician, rather than using it blindly and privately, in order to avoid serious impacts on their health.