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Post-menopausal bleeding causes
Vaginal Atrophy and Bleeding After Menopause
After menopause, low estrogen can make vaginal and lower genital tissues thin and fragile. This can cause light bleeding, spotting after intercourse, dryness, and discomfort.
Quick definition
Atrophy means tissue thinning after menopause. It is common and usually treatable.
Even when atrophy is likely, uterine causes still need to be excluded first.
When to seek urgent care
- Heavy bleeding, dizziness, fainting, or feeling weak.
- Bleeding with fever, severe pelvic pain, or offensive discharge.
- Any recurrent bleeding after an initial reassuring result.
If you are unsure, contact reception or your nearest emergency centre.
What this usually means
- This is one of the most common benign causes of post-menopausal bleeding.
- Symptoms often include dryness, soreness, and contact bleeding.
- Because symptoms can overlap with other causes, formal assessment remains essential.
How this is assessed
Assessment combines pelvic/speculum examination with endometrial evaluation (biopsy or transvaginal ultrasound) to exclude uterine pathology.
Step 1
Symptom pattern review
We review timing, triggers (for example intercourse), and associated dryness or soreness.
Step 2
Speculum examination
This checks for fragile local tissue, lesions, and other local causes of bleeding.
Step 3
Endometrial check
Biopsy or transvaginal ultrasound is used to exclude endometrial cancer or precancer.
Step 4
Plan and follow-up
Local treatment is started where appropriate, with follow-up if bleeding continues.
Treatment options by situation
Treatment is based on severity, symptoms, and your preferences after serious causes are excluded.
Local vaginal estrogen (selected)
Can improve tissue quality and reduce recurrent spotting due to atrophy.
Non-hormonal support
Moisturizers, lubricants, and trigger-aware care can improve comfort and reduce minor bleeding.
What happens next
Most people improve with local symptom treatment once serious causes are excluded.
- Start local symptom-directed treatment where appropriate.
- Reassess if bleeding continues or changes.
- Keep a low threshold for repeat endometrial evaluation if symptoms recur.
Atrophy-related bleeding is usually manageable, but persistent or recurrent bleeding should always be re-checked.
Next step: assessment helps us confirm diagnosis early and choose the right treatment pathway safely.
Common questions
Frequently asked questions
Can atrophy alone cause bleeding?
Yes. Fragile tissue can bleed with friction or irritation, but uterine causes should still be excluded.
If symptoms improve, do I still need follow-up?
If bleeding has fully settled and your initial workup was reassuring, follow-up is usually symptom-based.
When should I return quickly?
If bleeding becomes heavier, keeps recurring, or new pain/fever symptoms develop.
Need a plan today? We can assess urgency, explain findings clearly, and map your next steps.