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Introduction to cervical laceration

Contents 1 Pinyin 2 English reference 3 Disease classification 4 Disease overview 5 Disease description 6 Symptoms and signs 7 Treatment options 8 Special tips 9 Related sources attached: 1 Acupoints for treating cervical laceration 1 Pinyin

zǐ gōng jǐng liè shāng 2 English reference

Laceration of cervix 3 Disease classification

Obstetrics and Gynecology 4 Disease overview

Cervical canal laceration and Like uterine rupture, tearing of the cervical canal can easily occur when the delivery force is too strong. When the resistance of the cervical canal of older primiparous infants is too strong, when the fetus is too large, or when the position of the fetus is abnormal, the cervical canal may be injured due to strong force. After delivery, the uterus contracts well, and there are no wounds on the vagina and vagina, but blood is always flowing, and it can also be considered that the cervical canal is torn.

Cervical lacerations often occur when mothers give birth. If the laceration is very shallow and there is no bleeding at the time, it is often not detected. Only when the laceration is deep and the amount of bleeding is large can it be discovered through examination. Once a cervical laceration is discovered, it should be sutured immediately. If the stitches are neatly aligned and healed well during suturing, there will be no obvious traces of laceration after the cervix completely returns to normal. If the laceration is deep and was not sutured at the time, or the alignment is not good, and the healing is poor, after the cervix recovers, you can see that the cervix has split into a large transverse fissure or split into several flaps. Much like a cleft lip, this is called an old cervical laceration. Due to cervical laceration, the cervical mucosa often turns outwards and is soaked in acidic vaginal fluid all day long, which can easily cause infection. After infection, leucorrhea increases, and sometimes the leucorrhea is pus-like or bloody. Touching with fingers during vaginal or internal examination often causes contact bleeding. If the infection spreads internally, the parauterine tissue and main ligaments will also thicken due to inflammatory infiltration, and patients often feel pain in the lumbosacral region. People with old cervical lacerations have a slightly higher incidence of cervical cancer than normal people.

5 Disease Description

Cervical laceration is the same as uterine rupture. Cervical laceration is likely to occur when the force of delivery is too strong. When the resistance of the cervical canal of older primiparous infants is too strong, when the fetus is too large, or when the position of the fetus is abnormal, the cervical canal may be injured due to strong force. After delivery, the uterus contracts well, and there are no wounds on the vagina and vagina, but blood is always flowing, and it can also be considered that the cervical canal is torn. 6 Symptoms and Signs

The uterus is contracting well but the vagina is still bleeding. 7 Treatment Plan

After the third stage of labor, if the uterus contracts well but vaginal bleeding continues, the vagina must be expanded, clamp the cervix with two sponge forceps, and check around the cervix. If there is a laceration, use sponge forceps to clamp both sides of the laceration and suture it intermittently with No. 1 chromium catgut. 8 Special Tips

To prevent intrapartum cervical laceration, you must do the following before and during delivery:

1. When giving prenatal education to pregnant women, it is necessary to emphasize the opening of the cervix. Avoid holding your breath downwards forcefully before lifting.

2. Strictly understand the indications and contraindications of midwifery surgery. It is not appropriate to perform midwifery surgery before the cervix is ??fully dilated.

3. Any intrauterine or intrauterine operation, such as internal inversion, decapitation, craniotomy and artificial placenta removal, should be done gently and correctly to avoid violence.

9 Related sources

"Internal Medicine 5th Edition", "Surgery 5th Edition", "Pediatrics 6th Edition", "Internal Medicine 6th Edition" Acupoints for treating cervical laceration: uterine point

Pinyin: zǐgōngxué English: zǐgōng;EXCA1 Overview: The uterus is the name of an extra-menstrual acupoint (zǐgōngEXC... Cell Gate

Pinyin: bāomén English: orificeoftheuterinecervix;GuānyuánCV4;... Qi points

Pinyin: qìxué English: QìxuéKI13; qìxué; K13; KI13 Overview: Qi points: 1. Acupoints; 2. Meridian points... Zihu

Pinyin: zǐhù English : femaleepudendum; vulva Overview: Zihu: 1. Alias ??of meridian points; 2. Names of odd points outside the meridian... Chesshu