Vaginal Bleeding

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Sinisa Franjic

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Published: 20 January 2019 | Article Type :

Abstract

In reproductive age women may undergo a causal gynecological alteration or other findings suggesting the cause. If there is no apparent change in the hormone therapy in the younger patients and bleeding is pointic, it is probably associated with hormonal therapy. If the problem consists only of abundant menstrual bleeding, consideration is given to changes in the uterus or bleeding disorder. Inheritance bleeding disorders can initially be manifested by abundant menstrual bleeding that begins in menaches or in adolescence. Postmenopausal women should consider gynecological cancer.

All women in the reproductive age should do urine screening for pregnancy. During early pregnancy (before 5 weeks) urine examination may be insufficiently sensitive. Pollution urine with blood can give false results.

Abnormal vaginal bleeding is any vaginal bleeding that appears independently of regular and orderly menstruation. This is one of the most common problems in gynecology. There is a huge difference in meaning, diagnosis, therapy and prognosis of vaginal bleeding in pregnancy and out of pregnancy, and then in women of different ages.

Vaginal bleeding can result with abnormal shock. Symptoms of shock are: damp, cold and sticky skin, rapid and weak pulse, thirst, possible collapse or loss of consciousness.

Keywords: Bleeding, Pregnancy, Emergency, Health.

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Sinisa Franjic. (2019-01-20). "Vaginal Bleeding." *Volume 2*, 1, 1-6