Uterine perforation
Appearance
Uterine perforation
| Subclass of | organ perforation, female genital trauma |
|---|---|
| Health specialty | emergency medicine |
Perforaasiyoŋ reedu ko caɗeele potɗe arde e kala golle nder reedu. Ina waawi tawa ina jokkondiri e gaañde ƴiiƴam walla ɓalndu taariindi ko wayi no ɓuuɓri walla ɓalndu. So tawii anndaaka e sahaa nde o waɗata ndee, ina waawi sahaa e sahaa fof addude ƴiiƴam mawɗam walla sepsis ; kono ko ɓuri heewde e perforaasiyoŋaaji reedu ko sub-klinik, ina mbaawi safrude e koye mum en tawa safaara mum en alaa, tee ina addana ɗum en bonnude no feewi e nder yontaaji juutɗi.[1][2][3][4]Geɗe baawɗe saabaade ɗum ina njeyaa heen : ɓuuɓri reedu e nder golle trans-cervical walla ustaare semmbe ɓalndu myometrium hono no reedu walla menopause nii.[5]
Ƴeew kadi
[taƴto | taƴto ɗaɗi wiki]- Ruppude reedu
Tuugnorgal
[taƴto | taƴto ɗaɗi wiki]- ↑ ""You need not worry about long-term effects either. A uterine perforation presents no risk of uterine rupture during pregnancy or any other threat to your health. "Typically, a perforation heals up and you never know it was there," added Dr. Sholes-Douglas."". Archived from the original on 2015-05-02. Retrieved 2015-06-30.
- ↑ ""Most perforations ... tend to be located in the fundus and are usually self-limiting and less serious"". Archived from the original on 2015-07-06. Retrieved 2015-07-05.
- ↑ "Uterine perforations ... are rarely noticed and almost never dangerous.... Since none of these resulted in complications, ... the authors recommended no treatment for the majority of known or suspected uterine perforations."
- ↑ "When this happens, as long as no internal organs (intestines, bladder, or rectum) or large blood vessels are damaged, the hole will almost always heal itself without further surgery."
- ↑ utdol.com > Uterine perforation during gynecologic procedures Author: Barbara S Levy, MD, PS. Retrieved on Feb 14, 2010