## Correct Answer: D. Imperforate hymen Imperforate hymen is the most common obstructive lesion of the lower genital tract in adolescent girls presenting with primary amenorrhoea. The clinical presentation is pathognomonic: cyclical abdominal/pelvic pain (due to retrograde menstruation and haematometra formation) combined with a bulging perineal mass. The bulge represents accumulated menstrual blood distending the vagina (haematocolpos), which is visible as a dark, tense swelling at the introitus. The hymen is an embryological remnant of the urogenital sinus; when imperforate, it completely obstructs the vaginal opening despite normal uterine and ovarian function. Diagnosis is clinical (bulging introitus + cyclical pain + primary amenorrhoea) and confirmed by ultrasound showing fluid-filled vagina and normal uterus/ovaries. Treatment is simple: cruciate or stellate incision of the hymen under local or general anaesthesia, allowing drainage of haematocolpos and restoration of normal menstrual flow. Unlike other causes of primary amenorrhoea with outflow obstruction, imperforate hymen is the only condition where a perineal bulge is the cardinal sign. This is a high-yield, commonly tested scenario in Indian medical exams because it is preventable and easily treatable. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Cervical agenesis** — Cervical agenesis causes primary amenorrhoea and cyclical pain (due to haematometra), but does NOT produce a perineal bulge because the vagina remains patent and open. Blood accumulates in the uterus and upper vagina, not at the introitus. Diagnosis requires imaging to show absent cervix with normal uterus. This is a trap for students who focus only on 'cyclical pain' without considering the perineal bulge. **B. Transverse septum in the proximal vagina** — A transverse septum (usually at the junction of upper 1/3 and lower 2/3 vagina) also causes primary amenorrhoea and cyclical pain with haematometra, but the bulge would be located higher in the vagina, not at the perineum/introitus. The perineal bulge is pathognomonic for imperforate hymen because the obstruction is at the lowest point of the genital tract. Imaging shows a septum, not an intact hymen. **C. Complete vaginal atresia** — Complete vaginal atresia presents with primary amenorrhoea but NO cyclical pain because menstrual blood cannot accumulate in the vagina (there is no vaginal canal). There is no perineal bulge. Patients have normal external genitalia and normal uterus/ovaries on imaging. The absence of cyclical pain is the key discriminator; this condition requires progressive vaginal dilation or surgical reconstruction, not simple hymenal incision. ## High-Yield Facts - **Imperforate hymen** is the most common obstructive cause of primary amenorrhoea (accounts for ~90% of outflow obstructions in adolescents). - **Haematocolpos** (blood-filled vagina) produces a dark, bulging, tense swelling at the introitus—the cardinal clinical sign. - **Cyclical pain** occurs because menstruation is normal but outflow is blocked; pain is rhythmic and corresponds to menses. - **Diagnosis** is clinical (bulge + cyclical pain + primary amenorrhoea); ultrasound confirms fluid-filled vagina with normal uterus and ovaries. - **Treatment** is cruciate or stellate hymenal incision under local/general anaesthesia; prognosis is excellent with normal future menstruation and fertility. ## Mnemonics **PERINEAL BULGE = IMPERFORATE HYMEN** If you see 'bulge at introitus' + 'cyclical pain' + 'primary amenorrhoea', think imperforate hymen first. The bulge is the haematocolpos—blood trapped below the hymen. Other obstructions (cervical agenesis, transverse septum, atresia) do NOT produce a perineal bulge. **HAEMATOMETRA vs HAEMATOCOLPOS** Haematometra = blood in uterus (cervical agenesis, transverse septum) → pain but NO perineal bulge. Haematocolpos = blood in vagina (imperforate hymen) → pain + PERINEAL BULGE. The location of obstruction determines where blood accumulates. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs 'cyclical pain + primary amenorrhoea' with multiple obstructive lesions to lure students into choosing cervical agenesis or transverse septum. The discriminating feature—the perineal bulge—is the key; only imperforate hymen produces a visible bulge at the introitus because the obstruction is at the lowest anatomical point. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian OPD practice, a 16-year-old girl with primary amenorrhoea and a visible perineal bulge is imperforate hymen until proven otherwise. A simple bedside inspection and ultrasound confirm the diagnosis; hymenal incision under local anaesthesia (often done in the clinic) provides immediate relief and restores normal menstruation. This is one of the few causes of primary amenorrhoea that is both easily diagnosed and easily treated. _Reference: DC Dutta's Textbook of Obstetrics (7th ed.), Ch. 10 (Amenorrhoea); OP Ghai's Essential Obstetrics (9th ed.), Ch. 6 (Disorders of Menstruation)_
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