The submucosal fibroid (Latin sub — below, mucosa — mucous membrane) is a clinical anatomical variant of uterine leiomyoma, in which the mass grows centripetally (towards the uterine cavity), deforming its architecture.
According to the modern FIGO classification (PALM-COEIN), submucosal fibroids are divided into three types depending on their relationship with the myometrium:
Submucosal localization is the most clinically aggressive. Even small fibroids (1–2 cm) cause profuse menorrhagia with clots, leading to severe therapy-resistant anemia. Cramp-like pains are characteristic (“birthing fibroid”).
Furthermore, submucosal fibroids act like intrauterine contraceptives: they cause chronic inflammation and mechanically obstruct implantation, serving as an absolute cause of uterine infertility. Treatment — hysteroscopic resection (removal via vaginal access).
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