Heavy Periods (Menorrhagia) Toolkit

Evidence-graded information on heavy menstrual bleeding: what counts as heavy, common causes, immediate management, long-term treatments, and when heavy bleeding is an emergency.

Strong Evidence Moderate Evidence Emerging Research Traditional Use
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Is My Period Heavy? The Clinical Threshold

Many women with heavy bleeding do not realize their flow is abnormal because they have nothing to compare it to. Here is how doctors define and measure heavy menstrual bleeding.

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The Clinical Definition

Strong Evidence

Medically, heavy menstrual bleeding (HMB) is defined as blood loss of more than 80mL per cycle. However, the modern clinical definition focuses on impact: menstrual bleeding that interferes with physical, social, emotional, or material quality of life. In practical terms, you likely have HMB if you: soak through a regular pad or tampon in less than 2 hours; need to change products during the night; pass blood clots larger than a 10p coin (about 2.5cm / 1 inch); experience flooding (sudden heavy gush that overwhelms your product); need to double up on protection (pad + tampon); or if your period lasts more than 7 days. Approximately 1 in 3 women describe their periods as heavy, and about 1 in 5 meet clinical criteria.

What to track: Number of products used per day, how quickly they soak through, clot sizes, period duration. Use the Symptom Tracker for accurate records.
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The Soaking Test & Flow Volume

Strong Evidence

The soaking test: A fully soaked regular tampon or pad holds about 5mL of blood. A fully soaked super tampon or overnight pad holds about 10mL. To estimate your total flow: count fully soaked products and multiply. If you use 16+ regular pads/tampons in a cycle (fully soaked), you are likely over the 80mL threshold. Menstrual cups and discs make volume measurement much easier — most have mL markings. The average period produces 30-40mL total. Clot guide: Small clots (pea-sized) are normal. Clots larger than a 10p coin (2.5cm) or clots that appear regularly on heavy days suggest the uterus cannot keep up with clotting blood before expelling it, a sign of heavy flow.

Practical tip: If using a menstrual cup, record the mL at each emptying for one full period. This gives your doctor the most accurate flow data possible.
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Pictorial Blood Loss Assessment (PBAC)

Strong Evidence

The PBAC chart is a validated clinical tool for quantifying menstrual blood loss. You assign points based on how soaked your product is: Pads: lightly soiled = 1 point, moderately soaked = 5 points, fully saturated = 20 points. Tampons: lightly soiled = 1 point, moderately soaked = 5 points, fully saturated = 10 points. Clots: small (1cm) = 1 point, large (2.5cm+) = 5 points. A total score of 100+ over your entire period correlates with blood loss exceeding 80mL and confirms heavy menstrual bleeding. This tool is free, requires no special equipment, and gives your doctor objective data to guide treatment decisions.

How to use: Keep a simple tally each time you change a product. Note the saturation level and any clots. Total up at the end of your period. Bring 2-3 months of scores to your doctor.
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Signs of Iron Deficiency

Strong Evidence

Heavy menstrual bleeding is the leading cause of iron deficiency in women of reproductive age. Iron deficiency can develop even before anemia shows on a basic blood test. Symptoms include: persistent fatigue that sleep does not resolve, breathlessness with normal activity, heart palpitations, pale skin and nail beds, cold hands and feet, restless legs at night, brain fog and difficulty concentrating, cravings for ice or non-food items (pica), hair thinning, and frequent infections. Many women normalize these symptoms, not realizing their heavy periods have depleted their iron stores over months or years.

Tests to request: Ferritin (iron stores) — not just CBC/hemoglobin. Ferritin below 30 ng/mL with symptoms warrants treatment, even if hemoglobin is "normal." Aim for ferritin above 50 ng/mL for optimal energy.

Common Causes of Heavy Periods

Heavy bleeding has many possible causes. Understanding the most common ones helps you have informed conversations with your healthcare provider.

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Uterine Fibroids

Strong Evidence

Fibroids (leiomyomas) are non-cancerous growths of the uterine muscle and are the most common cause of heavy menstrual bleeding. By age 50, up to 70-80% of women develop fibroids, though many are asymptomatic. Fibroids cause heavy bleeding by increasing the surface area of the uterine lining, distorting the uterine cavity, interfering with the uterus's ability to contract and stop bleeding, and affecting local blood vessel regulation. Submucosal fibroids (those that grow into the uterine cavity) cause the heaviest bleeding even when small. Size ranges from a pea to a melon. Diagnosis is typically by ultrasound.

Treatment options: Range from medication (hormonal IUD, tranexamic acid) for mild symptoms to myomectomy (surgical removal) or uterine artery embolization for larger fibroids. See the management tab for details.
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Adenomyosis

Strong Evidence

Adenomyosis occurs when the tissue that normally lines the uterus (endometrium) grows into the muscular wall of the uterus. This causes the uterus to enlarge, become boggy, and bleed heavily. It is increasingly recognized as a very common cause of heavy, painful periods, affecting an estimated 20-35% of women. Symptoms include progressively heavier periods, severe cramps, a feeling of fullness or pressure in the pelvis, and painful intercourse. Adenomyosis is often underdiagnosed because it requires MRI or skilled ultrasound for accurate identification. It frequently coexists with endometriosis and fibroids.

Diagnosis: Transvaginal ultrasound by an experienced sonographer, or MRI. If you have heavy, painful periods and a "bulky uterus" is noted, ask about adenomyosis specifically.

Hormonal Imbalance (Anovulation)

Strong Evidence

When ovulation does not occur (anovulatory cycles), progesterone is not produced. Without progesterone to stabilize and organize the endometrial lining, estrogen causes it to grow thicker and more fragile. When this unstable lining eventually sheds, bleeding is often heavier, more prolonged, and unpredictable. Anovulatory heavy bleeding is most common at the extremes of reproductive life (teens and perimenopause) but also occurs with PCOS, thyroid disorders, significant stress, and rapid weight changes. The pattern is often irregular timing combined with heavy flow when bleeding does occur.

Clue: If your periods are both heavy AND irregular, anovulation is a likely contributor. Tracking BBT or using ovulation prediction kits can help confirm whether ovulation is occurring.
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Bleeding Disorders

Strong Evidence

Up to 20% of women with heavy menstrual bleeding have an underlying bleeding disorder, most commonly von Willebrand disease (VWD), which affects 1% of the general population. VWD impairs the blood's ability to clot effectively. Other bleeding disorders include platelet function defects and, rarely, clotting factor deficiencies. Clues that suggest a bleeding disorder: heavy periods since your very first period (menarche), easy bruising, prolonged bleeding after dental work or cuts, nosebleeds lasting 10+ minutes, family history of bleeding problems, or postpartum hemorrhage. These conditions are significantly underdiagnosed in women.

Tests to request: CBC with platelet count, PT/PTT, von Willebrand panel (VWF antigen, VWF activity, factor VIII). Test during the follicular phase — VWF levels fluctuate and can appear falsely normal during the luteal phase.
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Other Causes

Moderate Evidence

Endometrial polyps: Benign growths on the uterine lining that cause irregular or heavy bleeding. Diagnosed by ultrasound (especially saline infusion sonography) and removed via hysteroscopy. Thyroid disorders: Both hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism can cause heavy periods. Copper IUD: Can increase menstrual flow by 20-50% in some users, especially in the first 3-6 months. Medications: Blood thinners (warfarin, aspirin), some antidepressants, and tamoxifen can all increase menstrual bleeding. Endometrial hyperplasia: Thickening of the uterine lining, often from prolonged unopposed estrogen. Requires evaluation to rule out precancerous changes.

Key point: Heavy bleeding often has a specific, treatable cause. A thorough workup — not just acceptance — is warranted.

Management & Treatment

Evidence-graded approaches from immediate flow reduction to long-term treatment options and product recommendations for heavy flow.

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Tranexamic Acid

Strong Evidence

Tranexamic acid (TXA) is a non-hormonal medication that reduces menstrual blood loss by 30-55%. It works by stabilizing blood clots in the uterine lining, preventing the premature breakdown that causes heavy bleeding. Taken only during heavy flow days (typically 1-1.3g three times daily for up to 5 days), it acts quickly and is well-tolerated. It is available by prescription in most countries (over-the-counter in some). It can be combined with NSAIDs for additional flow reduction and pain relief. TXA does not affect your hormones, cycle regularity, or fertility.

Who it's for: Anyone with heavy periods who wants a non-hormonal, as-needed approach. Particularly useful if you cannot take hormonal treatments.
Avoid if: You have a history of blood clots (DVT, PE), active thromboembolic disease, or certain clotting disorders. Discuss with your doctor if you take combined hormonal contraception.
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NSAIDs for Flow Reduction

Strong Evidence

NSAIDs (ibuprofen, naproxen, mefenamic acid) reduce menstrual blood loss by 20-40% in addition to their pain-relieving effects. They work by inhibiting prostaglandin synthesis, which reduces both uterine contractions and blood flow. Mefenamic acid (Ponstan) has the best evidence specifically for flow reduction. Take throughout the heavy flow days on a scheduled basis, not just as needed for pain. Starting 1-2 days before expected heavy bleeding is ideal. NSAIDs and tranexamic acid can be used together safely for even greater flow reduction (up to 60-70% combined).

Who it's for: Those with heavy periods and cramps — addresses both symptoms simultaneously.
Avoid if: Stomach ulcers, GI bleeding history, kidney disease, aspirin allergy, or on blood thinners. Take with food.
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Hormonal IUD (Mirena/Liletta)

Strong Evidence

The levonorgestrel-releasing IUD (Mirena, Liletta) is considered the most effective medical treatment for heavy menstrual bleeding, reducing blood loss by 71-96%. It thins the endometrial lining locally with minimal systemic hormonal effects. By 12 months, about 50% of users have very light periods and 20% stop bleeding entirely. It is as effective as endometrial ablation for HMB, lasts 5-8 years, and preserves fertility. It is the first-line treatment recommended by NICE, ACOG, and WHO for heavy menstrual bleeding. It also treats adenomyosis-related bleeding effectively.

Who it's for: Most women with heavy periods, including those with fibroids (depending on size and location) and adenomyosis.
Note: Irregular spotting is common in the first 3-6 months. Large submucosal fibroids may prevent proper placement. Discuss candidacy with your provider.
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Other Hormonal Options

Strong Evidence

Combined oral contraceptive pills: Reduce menstrual blood loss by about 40-50%. Continuous use (skipping placebos) can further reduce bleeding frequency. Norethisterone/progestins: Taken cyclically (days 5-26) to regulate and reduce bleeding. Useful when estrogen-containing methods are contraindicated. Depo-Provera injection: Often causes amenorrhea (no periods) within 12 months. Good for those who want long-acting, hassle-free management. GnRH agonists: Temporarily suppress ovarian function — used short-term to shrink fibroids before surgery or as a bridge treatment.

Decision factors: Contraceptive needs, desire for future fertility, fibroid presence, age, blood clot risk, and personal preference all guide the choice. No single option is best for everyone.
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Iron Replenishment Strategies

Strong Evidence

If heavy periods have depleted your iron, replenishment is critical. Oral iron: Ferrous sulfate (325mg = 65mg elemental iron), ferrous bisglycinate (better tolerated), or iron polysaccharide complex. Take on an empty stomach with vitamin C to enhance absorption. Every-other-day dosing is now shown to be as effective as daily with fewer GI side effects. Allow 3-6 months to fully replenish stores. IV iron: Recommended when oral iron is not tolerated, ferritin is very low (<15), or rapid repletion is needed. A single infusion can restore stores in 1-2 weeks. Diet: Heme iron (red meat, liver, oysters) is absorbed 2-3x better than non-heme (spinach, lentils, fortified cereals). Pair non-heme iron with vitamin C. Avoid calcium, coffee, and tea with iron-rich meals.

What to track: Ferritin level (recheck after 3 months), energy levels, symptoms. Do not stop iron supplementation based on hemoglobin alone — continue until ferritin is above 50 ng/mL.
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Product Guide for Heavy Flow

Moderate Evidence

Menstrual cups (high capacity): Standard cups hold 25-30mL — 3-6x more than a tampon. High-capacity cups (Merula XL, Super Jennie) hold up to 42mL. Empty every 4-8 hours depending on flow. Menstrual discs: Sit higher and can hold 50-70mL. Auto-dump feature means they can last longer. Period underwear (heavy flow): Brands like Thinx Heavy, Modibodi Heavy-Overnight, or Knix Super hold 8-10 tampons' worth. Best as backup with cups/discs or for overnight. Overnight pads (super): Longest and most absorbent disposable option. Combination approach: For heaviest days, cup + period underwear provides maximum protection and confidence.

Practical tip: Keep a "heavy day kit" ready — backup underwear, extra products, wet bag, pain medication, and iron-rich snacks.

Red Flags: When Heavy Bleeding Is an Emergency

While most heavy periods can be managed with medical guidance, some situations require urgent attention.

Go to the Emergency Room If You Experience

  • Soaking through a super pad or tampon every 30 minutes for 2+ consecutive hours
  • Dizziness, lightheadedness, or fainting from blood loss
  • Heart racing (tachycardia) or shortness of breath at rest
  • Pale, clammy skin or feeling cold and shivery during heavy bleeding
  • Passing clots larger than a golf ball
  • Heavy bleeding with a positive pregnancy test (possible miscarriage or ectopic pregnancy)
  • Heavy bleeding with severe pelvic pain and fever (possible infection)
  • Bleeding that does not slow after 10+ days of continuous heavy flow
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What Happens in the ER

Strong Evidence

If you present to the ER with acute heavy menstrual bleeding, you can expect: vital signs check (blood pressure, heart rate — looking for signs of hypovolemia), blood tests (CBC to check hemoglobin/hematocrit, blood type and crossmatch if transfusion may be needed), IV fluids for stabilization, high-dose IV tranexamic acid or oral tranexamic acid, possibly high-dose hormonal therapy to stop active bleeding (combined OCP or IV conjugated estrogen), and evaluation for the underlying cause. If hemoglobin is very low (below 7 g/dL with symptoms), blood transfusion may be needed. You should be offered follow-up with gynecology for ongoing management after stabilization.

Be prepared: Bring your tracking data, medication list, and a description of how long the heavy bleeding has lasted. Advocate for a ferritin check, not just hemoglobin.
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Tests Your Doctor Should Run

Strong Evidence

A thorough evaluation for heavy menstrual bleeding should include: Blood tests: CBC (hemoglobin, hematocrit, platelets), ferritin, TSH (thyroid), coagulation screen (PT, PTT), von Willebrand panel if history suggests bleeding disorder. Imaging: Transvaginal ultrasound (first-line) to assess for fibroids, polyps, adenomyosis, and endometrial thickness. Saline infusion sonography (SIS) or hysteroscopy if polyps or submucosal fibroids are suspected. MRI for complex fibroids or adenomyosis characterization. Endometrial biopsy: Recommended for women over 45, or younger women with risk factors (obesity, anovulation, tamoxifen use) to rule out hyperplasia or cancer.

Advocate for yourself: If your doctor dismisses heavy bleeding without investigation, request these tests. Heavy periods deserve a diagnosis, not just a prescription. Generate a Clinic Pack to bring your data.
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Surgical Options When Needed

Strong Evidence

When medical management fails or is inappropriate: Polypectomy: Hysteroscopic removal of endometrial polyps — often day surgery with quick recovery. Myomectomy: Surgical removal of fibroids while preserving the uterus. Can be hysteroscopic (for submucosal), laparoscopic, or open depending on size and number. Endometrial ablation: Destroys the uterine lining to reduce or stop bleeding. Not for those wanting future pregnancy. 80-90% success rate. Uterine artery embolization: Cuts blood supply to fibroids, causing them to shrink. Minimally invasive alternative to surgery. Hysterectomy: Definitive treatment. Considered when other options have failed, fertility is not desired, and quality of life is severely impacted.

Key point: Surgery should only be considered after thorough medical management has been tried or when a specific anatomical cause requires it. Always seek a second opinion for hysterectomy recommendations.
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Tracking Flow Accurately

Moderate Evidence

Accurate flow tracking transforms your doctor's ability to help you. For the most useful data: record every product change with time and saturation level (light/moderate/heavy), note clot sizes (compare to coins: dime, quarter, golf ball), photograph your products before disposal if comfortable (many doctors find visual data helpful), track total period duration, and note the heaviest day(s). If using a menstrual cup, record mL at each emptying. Use the PBAC scoring system described in the assessment tab. Even 2-3 months of detailed tracking gives your doctor dramatically more information than saying "my periods are heavy."

Tools: Use the PeriodGuide Symptom Tracker to log flow daily, then generate a Clinic Pack report for your appointment.

Multiple Perspectives on Heavy Bleeding

Different disciplines offer complementary insights on understanding and managing heavy periods.

Gynecology

Focuses on structural causes (fibroids, polyps, adenomyosis), medical and surgical treatments, and iron replenishment. First-line: hormonal IUD or tranexamic acid.

Hematology

Evaluates for underlying bleeding disorders (von Willebrand, platelet dysfunction), manages iron deficiency with precision, and considers IV iron or transfusion when needed.

Nutrition

Emphasizes iron-rich diets, vitamin C for absorption, anti-inflammatory eating patterns, and addressing nutritional deficiencies that heavy bleeding creates or worsens.

Traditional Medicine

TCM uses blood-tonifying herbs (dang gui, shu di huang) and acupuncture for heavy bleeding. Ayurveda views menorrhagia as pitta excess and uses cooling herbs like shatavari and ashoka.

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Important Medical Disclaimer The information in this toolkit is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before starting any new supplement, medication, or treatment plan. Evidence grades reflect the current state of published research and may change as new studies are conducted. If you are experiencing severe or worsening symptoms, please seek medical attention promptly.