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. 2017 May 3;2017:2520989. doi: 10.1155/2017/2520989

Table 1.

Summary table for uterine fibroids.

Etiology Unknown

Incidence >60% over the age of 45 years

Age predilection >30 years

Risk factors Age, black race, early age at menarche, familial predisposition, overweight, polycystic ovary syndrome, diabetes, hypertension, nulliparity

Symptoms Menorrhagia, dysmenorrhea, anemia, pelvic pressure or pain, urinary symptoms, constipation, backache or leg pains, dyspareunia, infertility, or miscarriage

Treatment Treatment is required in up to 25% of women. Treatment options include medications, such as gonadotropin-releasing hormone (Gn-RH) agonists, hysterectomy, myomectomy, myolysis, uterine artery embolization, MR-guided Focused Ultrasound Surgery (MRgFUS)

Prognosis Benign tumor, excellent prognosis. In general, they begin to shrink after menopause, and they can grow quickly during pregnancy. They may also bleed into themselves, degenerate, become cystic, calcify, or undergo sarcomatous degeneration (<1% of cases)

Findings on MR imaging Well-defined uterine mass with uniformly low signal intensity as compared to the myometrium on T2-w images and iso-hypointense to the myometrium on T1-w images that enhances homogeneously when gadolinium is administered intravenously. Degenerated fibroids show complex appearance with high or heterogeneous signal on T2-w and postcontrast images