There is a strange gynaecology that causes girls in menstruation to spit blood.
Its causes are unknown and can lead to infertility.
Almost 190 million people around the world.
Tell me a real case of my emergency.
I was on an emergency duty that night, and there was a couple.
The girl is a 26-year-old doctor, accompanied by a boyfriend.
The patient told me that he coughed blood after dinner and that the tissues were all blood, that he thought he was dying and that he was very scared.
Call your boyfriend and send her to emergency.
I measured her blood pressure, which was basically normal, and the heart rate wasn’t too fast to comfort her.
She was speechless and her lips were shaking, and she was nervous, and she kept asking me what was going on and what was going on.
I suggest that she take her time, and now she’s stable in all aspects of vital signs, so let me know.
She told me three months ago she coughed, but it’s only a few days, or just some medicine.
It’s the best night of the night, when he coughs after he eats, and suddenly his throat smells of blood, and then he coughs a sip of blood, followed by a second and a third mouth, with blood all over his mouth.
I told her to stay in the rescue room for safety.
The rescue room has all kinds of patients, but it’s all very serious, and she can walk and it looks like the smallest one in the rescue room.
But I don’t know. I’m afraid she’ll be bled or bled again the next second.
She could be a time bomb.
Once she’s in place, I need to know if she coughs or vomits.
If it’s from the respiratory tract, for example, from the lungs, the trachea, the bronchial cough, it’s called blood.
If it comes from vomiting blood from digestive tracts, such as oesophagus, stomach, 12-finger intestines, it is called vomiting blood.
I told them it was different.
“I must be blood. She said to me, “I coughed very hard first, and then I coughed, but I didn’t think it was blood, and I almost fainted. I’m sorry.
“Are you sure there’s no food residue in the blood that comes out? I’ve confirmed repeatedly.
“None. I’m sorry.
If there is no food residue in the blood that coughs, then it’s basically an exclusion of vomiting.
After all, if the patient had just finished his dinner, if it had been indigestion, it would have come out with food residues.
I also quickly confirmed the fact that she had no chronic abdominal pains, abdominal swelling, anti-acid acids, gasses, etc.
That means she probably doesn’t have stomach ulcer, 12-finger ulcer, so it looks like it’s really not vomiting.
That’s really blood.
Blood comes from the respiratory tract.
I say you’re lucky, just a little bit of blood. The day before yesterday, a patient had a bloodbath and couldn’t save it.
I’m saying this to make her know that blood can be dangerous.
But I didn’t think that was a little too strong, and she was scared when she heard the face change and her lips were shaking.
I’m going to go on and say that you’re in little blood.
I asked the nurse to open her veins, which, in common, is the type of injection that can be injected at any time.
If she waits for real blood, we can’t get her a shot. We have to do it in advance, and we can take a blood test.
I gave her a good look at her heart and lungs, and I didn’t notice anything unusual.
She’s a little more stable, asking me what it might be.
I told her that the most common causes of blood were tuberculosis, lung cancer and bronchial extension.
In addition, ordinary pneumonia is possible, mostly lung problems, but heart and some vascular diseases can also have blood.
In the short term, the cause of the disease is not clear enough to be investigated.
Her boyfriend said all the checks were checked.
I had Dr. Phoe push her to go to the CT to see the lung.
At the same time, her boyfriend was instructed to be careful to protect the respiratory tract and not to suffocate if there was blood on the way.
I can’t walk on my own. There’s an emergency that needs to be handled.
Not for long, they’re done CT’s back.
Fortunately, everything went well, and the film and the report went on.
The chest CT saw that the upper left lung had a little glass grinding, which didn’t look great.
However, the nature is unknown and it is difficult to say what it is. It may be pneumonia, tuberculosis or lung cancer.
“There are so many possibilities?” Her boyfriend doesn’t seem to like my advice.
I’ve seen this a lot, and many patients and family members think that we can come up and determine the state of the disease, and that one or two more examinations require an accurate response.
Yes, most patients can do it because it’s simple.
But it’s not easy for this woman, and the C.T. report is ambiguous, and I don’t have much information on my hands, and I can’t judge.
At that point, the results of the blood-screeching were back, the white cell count was higher, the rest was normal, and the electrolyte of the liver and kidney function was normal.
I suggest that we stay in the hospital, have a respiratory unit, and tomorrow we can think of doing an enhanced CT, with a clearer look, even a fiber bronchial lens.
Of course, it could be a common pneumonia, and a few days of antibiotics might be enough, so there’s no blood.
Generally, normal pneumonia does not bled, but it is not surprising if it happens to affect the blood vessels, resulting in their destruction.
“Can I go home? I feel better. The patient asked me.
“That’s not good. Blood can’t be small enough to take risks. “I simply turned her down.
She was scared to death. How could she have come home?
Her boyfriend was more careful, agreed to my advice, hospitalized.
I gave her something to stop the bleeding and let the respiratory surgeon come down and see the patient.
He also states that the cause of the blood is unknown and requires further hospitalization.
“Let’s do it. I’m telling you.
Then I learned that the patient had bled again after he had had respiratory surgery.
And it’s not so small, it scares the on-duty doctor, and it’s a lot of all kinds of meds, and it’s hard to stop the bleeding.
The next day, the patient was given a chest CT booster scan to find out if there was lung cancer.
Our doctor hasn’t identified the cause, but the patient and her boyfriend are already terrified.
They believe that lung cancer is highly probable and that, although the patient is so young, there are two things that scare people:
First, the patient ‘ s aunt died of lung cancer;
Secondly, the patient moved into the newly renovated new house for two months and she herself considered that formaldehyde was too much.
Because last night’s chest C.T. was flat, it wasn’t clear about the tumor, so it was remade for an enhanced scan, and it was injected with a film maker. Last night I tried to give the patient a direct CT enhancement, but it wasn’t easy for the Video Section to do an enhanced scan at night.
One is the lack of staff to free people to give the patient a specialized shot;
Another is the delay in enhancing the scan, which may be a potential threat to patients.
It’s not like lung cancer.
There is a high risk of pneumonia or tuberculosis.
As a result, respiratory physicians gave patients a round of tests on nodules, including PPD tests, TB antibodies, T-SPOT tests, multiple searches for anti-acid coli, etc., but the results were negative.
This suggests that tuberculosis is virtually impossible.
In general, typical tuberculosis can be roughly diagnosed by video, but there are always unusual times.
The lung performance of this female patient is not very typical, so no one dares say it was a tuberculosis.
The end result proves that she may not really be tuberculosis.
Plus, she’s a obese, not often hypothermia, and not a typical tuberculosis person. Typical tuberculosis patients are thin, weak, like Linda Yu.
If it’s not lung cancer or tuberculosis, then it’s normal pneumonia.
In fact, respiratory physicians have been treated for pneumonia, with antibiotics being used throughout.
It’s been almost a week, and it’s getting better.
The patient doesn’t cough, the blood is gone.
Their director was unsure and reviewed another CT and found that the pulmonary stoves had been significantly reduced.
That’s right.
This confirms once again that the patient is merely a common bacterial pneumonia, not lung cancer, not bronchial expansion, not tuberculosis or other suspicious diseases.
If it’s lung cancer, tuberculosis, you can’t make a significant improvement in antibiotics for a week, and even lung cancer will grow with impunity.
Plus, bronchial extended chest CT is typical, and it doesn’t look like it now.
The patient was happy to hear that it was pneumonia.
A hundred years ago, in the age of lack of antibiotics, pneumonia could have died. But now, most pneumonia can be easily dealt with.
The patient was finally discharged.
But not long ago, there was an accident.
After almost a month, I’ve forgotten the patient.
Soon I ended the ER rotation and went back to the ICT ward and continued to move bricks.
I was on night shift that night.
Respiratory’s called us, saying there’s a bloodthirsty patient. He’s in shock. He’s going to be transferred to our ward.
There was an empty bed, and after I had the nurse ready to take care of the patient, the horse went to the respiratory.
I’ve been thinking about it all the time, and if it’s not just blood, it’s just death.
We’ll have to call a second-line doctor. She’ll have to come over and help us.
It’s a mess at the Respiratory.
There was blood on the patient ‘ s bed, on the covers and on the floor, and it was clear that there had just been blood.
Patients breathe a little faster, see blood pressure on EK custody, high, high heart rate, and an O2 saturation of 98%, which is in the case of a nose tube.
At first look, it seems okay, better than I thought.
His lips were a little pale and he looked fine. I was surprised to find out that this was the blood doctor I saw in E.R. last month.
Didn’t we say we were cured?
And it’s obviously much heavier than last time.
Respiratory duty doctors told me that the patient was diagnosed with pneumonia the last time he was discharged, but that he was bleeding again at home tonight.
After the emergency doctor finished the chest CT, she was sent to respiratory.
Just after the bed, the patient coughed, and then the floor and the blanket were covered in blood, and the patient coughed several mouths of blood, which was almost bursting out.
That’s scary.
Respiratory second-line teacher also returned, directing rescue.
In this context, three are most critical.
First, stop the bleeding right away, either with the medicine or with the fiberglass, and find the dots and strangle them, although it’s difficult.
Second, immediate blood transfusions are resistant to shock and the patient ‘ s blood pressure is stabilized.
Third, and most easily neglected, is the need to ensure that the good patient’s respiratory tract is smooth and that the patient is not choked by clots, which, once suffocated, is over.
I agree with you very much.
But it’s easy to say, it’s hard to do, but it’s hard to do.
Patient boyfriends too, panicking, rushing all the way to ICU.
Last time we were thinking of pneumonia, it looks like it’s not just pneumonia, but it’s not just pneumonia. “No, I’ve been a doctor for 30 years and I’ve never had this pneumonia. The second-line teacher told us.
So the patient should have hidden problems and no cause.
I called out the patient’s boyfriend and I talked to him about the ICT situation.
I’m very careful to say it’s blood, but the cause of the disease is unknown and the ICU is an extra layer of protection.
We will also try to cure her and stop the bleeding, but we cannot guarantee that it will succeed, but we can only say that we are doing our best.
He didn’t recognize me. I was armed with a mask.
“I don’t care. He said, “Save the patient is your problem. You said it was pneumonia, and now it’s not. I don’t understand. Now my wife is in your hands. You must help me. I’m sorry.
He is ambivalent, angry and helpless, trying to blame us and asking for us.
After the quick communication of fees and other attentions, I asked my superior to show my doctor, and I was going to take the patient to ICU.
I didn’t think the patient was starting to retreat, and she had blood on her mouth and said she wouldn’t go to ICU.
I went straight to her and told her that if there was any serious blood, it would have to be an intubation, a trombone to stop the bleeding. Only if ICU can do it, there’s a chance.
“If anything happens, it’s a dead end. The doctor on duty added a sentence.
It worked, the patient stopped fighting, worked with us, sent into ICU.
The second-line doctor told me that the CT on the chest saw the stove, not near the atmosphere. If it was local bleeding, it would be difficult to stop it under the mirror.
I’ve seen C.T. too. It’s hard.
It may be difficult, but if there is no other way, or if there is no other option, the attempt should be made. There was consensus.
After arriving at the ICU, they continued to use herbal meds, and pyrethroids were also used.
The pyrethroid chlorophyll is a drug that reduces the flow of blood in the lungs, thereby reducing haemorrhage.
I told the patient’s boyfriend that it would be better to sign if you were not a direct relative or a real couple.
He told me that his family was in the province, that it was at least tomorrow, and that he was now in charge of any rescue measures.
Her boyfriend indicated that, had it not been for such a big deal, they had planned to get married.
I asked my superior physician and the Medical Section, and in that case, the patient ‘ s boyfriend signed it.
When the immediate family arrives, they will sign.
“Do what you have to do and go on.” The medical section says:
I told my patient’s boyfriend that the most important problem now is to stop the bleeding and to stop it, there is no danger to life.
The patient’s boyfriend is already very anxious at this moment, and the whole person is restless and I understand him.
I told him it would take some time to determine the cause.
And tell him that I was the last one to see a female patient at the E.R.
I took off my mask.
He did a fight and finally recognized me.
I told him the patient’s condition was a little complicated, and we’re trying to find out.
The most important thing tonight is to stop the bleeding as soon as possible.
If the patient did not cough up in time, if she did not do it again, she would probably have been able to block the respiratory tract and cause asphyxiation, which would have put her life at risk.
The patient’s boyfriend has been anxious to ask us, so far.
I said that hemorrhages had been used in two or three ways, and I started to give her a blood transfusion. If we can’t stop the bleeding, or if there’s repeated crumbs, especially if it’s big, we’re going to intubate her.
First, she was put down with a tranquilizer, then a thick-finger pipe was inserted from her mouth to the airpipe.
And then we’ll go down with a fiber bronchor and see where the bleeding is, and we’ll find a way to kill it.
It also protects the unblooded lung and does not allow the blood to flow back into it to cause suffocation.
The patient’s boyfriend seems to know better than to nod.
“Is this going to happen soon? I’m sorry.
“We can wait and observe. After all, bronchial tube intubation and fiber lenses are also at risk and may increase haemorrhage. If she can stop the bleeding herself, don’t risk it. I said:
I went back to the ward and stayed in front of the patient’s bed.
Patients panic and ask me when I can get out of ICU.
“One day I can’t stand it. It’s so depressing. She looked around and she was breathing.
Right, the ICU patients are very dangerous, almost all of them are tube inductors and respirators.
There are also blood purification machines, machines that are ticking and ticking, constant and sharp alarms, hasty sound and footsteps of doctors and nurses, which are really purgatory for a conscious young patient.
I comforted her, said to watch for two days, and if there’s no bleeding, we go back to respiratory medicine, and your boyfriend can stay with you.
A young nurse next to me asked me what it was like to give this patient.
I said that pulmonary haemorrhage could be used, that it constricted part of the blood vessels, reduced the amount of blood flowing into the lungs, and thus reduced the engraved blood to stop the bleeding.
“I thought this drug could be used only for obstetrical and gynaecology patients, and I saw a lot of post-partum haemorrhages in my obstetrics practice, and it used to be used. She said:
“Does it cause menstruation? Does it cause menstruation? She kept asking me.
Well, it’s a question-and-answer little girl.
Neither will I. I shake my head.
This knowledge, which overlaps with the gynaecology and endocrinology, is more complex, and I am half-aware.
Hemorrhagic drugs are running out, and they’re running into 2u red cells and 400ml plasma, and the patient seems to have stabilized, and there’s no blood.
The blood routines reviewed indicate that the haemoglobin has returned to 98g/L, which is almost the normal level of the patient because she herself is slightly anaemic.
Blood pressure is normal. Heart rate is not that fast.
Before, the heart rate was estimated to be related to haemorrhage and stress, and now when it settles down, you all have a little relaxed.
After a round of patients, I’m going to take a break and I can’t get my eyelids fixed.
But I can’t sleep, and this blood-blooded female patient here is a time bomb, and she’s not bleeding anymore, but we don’t know when the next blood will be, and the unknown feels really bad.
The second-line doctor called and asked how the patient was.
I have been busy reporting, and I have also expressed my concern about whether I should be more active and go straight to her trachea for fiberglasses.
Doctor 2 wants me to calm down.
Patients are now so sober that, in the film, it is estimated that the stoves are not too big to observe.
We’ll discuss it tomorrow, if we can.
That’s all.
Not long ago, the nurse came in and called me and said the patient was having a period.
“I know, I just knew. I said, “I’d like to get some more eyes and rest. You put two more clean dressings on her. It’s better than a sanitary towel. I’m sorry.
“No, she said it had to be a sanitary towel. The nurse firmly told me.
I tried to call her boyfriend, but I turned it off, nobody answered, and I couldn’t find someone to send a sanitary towel.
I couldn’t sleep either. I just got up.
“Can you do something? Like you little girls, who’s got the inventory, give her a piece or two. I’m sorry.
The nurse took a look at me and said we wouldn’t use it if we had any.
I know that the girls are very kind, that it’s hard to see this young girl sick, that everyone wants to help her, and that she can do whatever she wants.
We’re all girls of the same age, so it’s good enough to help her find a towel.
In that case, let her use the wound dressing. The sanitary napkins are the same kind of dressing.
I’m going to convince her myself. Where did you find her a sanitary towel in the middle of the night? The only guy with hope doesn’t answer the phone.
And the patient told me that her boyfriend should be at the door.
“I told him to go back to bed at this late hour, the phone must be dead, so I didn’t get a call. I said:
She insisted that I look at the door and if her boyfriend was out there, he would go back and bring some sanitary towels.
I couldn’t help her, and I didn’t want her to get too excited, but if the blood pressure was so high, it wouldn’t be good, so I promised her to look outside.
Looking outside, it really surprised me.
Her boyfriend was really there, lying on the stool in the hallway.
He was a little surprised to see me, and then he was nervous.
“Not blood again? He asked me.
I told him not to panic. It’s nothing. I just wanted you to go home and get some sanitary towels.
That’s all he’s got.
“And you’ve got to keep your phone open, remember to charge, and if anything happens, you can’t be found. I told him.
He scratched his head, a little embarrassed, and said that every time I was in hospital, it was a coincidence for me to go home and get a sanitary towel.
Every time I wonder.
“Only the last time I was in hospital, I didn’t have enough sanitary towels. I went out and bought them. He says:
“The menstruation last time? “I feel a little unsettled.
“Yes. I’m sorry.
After he left, I was standing there and my brain was moving at speed.
I seem to have found something.
I’ve been in hospital twice because of blood.
The menstruation was due to vaginal haemorrhage, which was caused by the fall of the uterus.
If there’s lung bleeding at the same time, what does that mean? I almost got excited.
It’s an endometriosis.
It’s a gynecology disease, but it’s not impossible.
Endometriosis, which refers to the membrane that was originally confined to the uterus, may now be present in other parts, most commonly in other organs of the pelvis, in rare cases in the gastrointestinal tract or in the respiratory tract, as is the case with the patient.
If it’s a gastrointestinal hemorrhagic abdominal abdominal abdomen following the menstruation cycle; if it’s a lung abdomen, it’s bound to follow the menstruation cycle.
In any part of the world, the membrane of the uterus is bleeding from the menstruation cycle.
Isn’t that blood?
Is it really an endometriosis? I can’t believe I’ve never seen this. Everything is just theoretical knowledge.
I went back to the room and saw that the patient’s vital signs were stable, and I felt better.
If this is really an endometriosis, the bleeding would have ended with the end of the menstruation cycle, and I finally lost my little heart in my throat.
I’d really like to call a second-line doctor and let her come over and assess it, but when it comes to this, there’s no need to disturb her.
It’s just like menstruation, but it’s not in the reproductive tract, but in the respiratory tract, it’s really a bandit.
Although I think this is very likely, for the time being, the patient and his family will not be informed, and the gynaecologist will consult with the doctor tomorrow to determine if this is the case.
Soon, the patient’s boyfriend came with a sanitary towel.
The patient had a heart attack.
I’m even a bit preposterous. Is it possible that the hemorrhaging of the alien tissue in the lungs after the bleeding of the uterus? I hope so.
Whether or not the speculation is reasonable, the patient did not bleed at midnight.
Everyone had a good night.
The next day I reported to my superiors, especially when you heard that the blood had happened twice during the menstruation cycle.
But no one dares to be prepared for any great blood.
We’ve got respiratory and gynaecologists here, and we’ve checked the patients for a couple of CTs, almost the same location.
Scanning of the glass, chest and chest C.T. is considered to exclude lung cancer, bronchial expansion, and other examinations exclude tuberculosis, lung pathologies caused by autoimmune diseases, etc.
The gynaecologist said that, in terms of the patient ‘ s blood flow, it did correspond to endometriosis.
I asked the patient carefully, and the patient remembered, and it was true that the blood was in the menstruation cycle, but the patient himself did not realize that it was related to the menstruation and did not deliberately tell the doctor.
Respiratory physicians were troubled and said that the medical history had not been sufficiently detailed at the time of the first hospitalization, without asking the patient about his period of menstruation, so that it had been omitted.
People comfort him and say it’s a rare case of common membrane heresy that goes to places like ovaries, dysentery bands, pelvis cavities, and so on.
Even when asked about menstruation, it is estimated that it will not be possible to link them.
It’s easy to diagnose membrane heresy, and in a few days, the patient’s menstruation is clean, so let’s pull out and make a chest CT.
It’s not just an inflammation, it’s not working with antibiotics, it’s invisible, it’s falling off and it’s drained out in the form of gin.
The gynaecologist’s words are very good, and we agree.
Reminiscent of last night’s bloody scene, the respiratory surgeon and I still have a problem.
In fact, this was the case when the patient was hospitalized for the first time, thinking that it was bacterial pneumonia, using antibiotics, and then the symptoms improved, and the breast CT stove was significantly improved when it was thought to be pneumonia.
Now, to think about it, it’s probably what gynecologists have to say. It’s a clean menstruation. It’s not about our drugs.
And the nurse reminded me that the patient had menstruation, and because I had no experience with it, I never thought that the blood of the patient could be related to menstruation.
But if I had experience like that, I wouldn’t be stupid enough to talk to a nurse about the efficacy of pyrethroids.
It’s really interesting.
After careful assessment, which was also a strong demand of the patient, we moved the patient out on the same day and returned to the respiratory ward.
It would have been more appropriate to go back to the gynaecology, but if there was blood, the gynaecologists might not be able to handle it, so it would have been more appropriate to go back to the respiratory medicine.
The gynaecologist told the patient and his family that this was the blood caused by endometriosis.
Patients and their families could not believe it until they had checked the Internet and learned that there was such a disease.
After the menstruation, when the chest CT was reviewed, it was almost gone.
Figuring out.
“What do we do with it? You can’t spit blood on your menstruation? The patient frowns and asks gynecologists.
There are two ways, one of which is to operate, open the chest and cut the uterine membrane of the lung. However, there is a risk that it may not be clean and that there may be post-operative bleeding.
“I don’t think about it. It’s scary. The patient says:
The second way is to take the pill, not to allow menstruation.
The pill included estrogens and gestation hormones, which could not be menstrual or bleeding during the course of the drug.
That’s a good way to go.
“I can’t keep using contraception. I’ve got plans to get married and have kids. The patient is upset.
The gynaecologist laughed, saying that it was not always eating, that it would be about a year, that it would be possible to stop the drug, that there would be no further bleeding, and that if it was, it would be necessary to change the medication or consider the operation.
When I went to the respiratory ward to see the patient, she stopped bleeding and the pill started taking.
Before I left, I told her boyfriend you saved your wife.
In fact, I mean he told me that the patient was in both cases related to menstruation, but he probably thought I was saying that he was taking care of her, that he was supposed to take care of his wife and that the rest was up to you.
I didn’t plan to tell him that it was because of his unintentional reminder that we made the correct diagnosis. It’s not like we’re not good enough.
Later, I heard the gynecologist say that the first month after the patient had used the pill, the second month was completely empty of blood and lasted a year.
A year after the cut, there’s still no blood.
The baby was born later.
So far, almost three years now, I’ve heard that there’s still no menstrual blood.
It appears that the pill really starved the uterine membrane tissue in the lungs.
Bless her.
Cope classroom: What is an endometriosis?
What’s with the membrane? What are the typical symptoms?
Endouterine membrane is a gynaecology disease, only for women and certainly not for men (this is still emphasized).
Because, by definition, the disease is a change in the uterine membrane, which normally occurs only in the uterus, and if other organs also have an uterine membrane, it is an endometriosis.
Why is there an endometriosis?
It is also not clear at present that there are those who believe it is related to trans-blood flow and that it may be associated with the planting of some of the obstetrical and gynaecological operations resulting in the misinformation of the uterine membranes.
That’s why we don’t understand.
Since many organs have the possibility of intrauterine membrane anisodes, the symptoms of different organs are different. In general, there is the possibility of lower abdominal pains, pains, menstrual abnormalities, etc., and the risk of sexual discomfort, even infertility, if the rectal uterus is dented.
The intestinal abdominal abdominal diarrhea constipation; the urinary anecdotes, etc.
People like the ones we’re talking about, they’re different in the respiratory tract, they’re coughing, they’re blood.
What about membranes? How?
The examination is mainly an ultrasound examination, which can see the aerobics of the ovarian ovary and bladder, rectum, etc.
The abdominal lens is the best internationally recognized method of diagnosis, and abdominal lens can be examined for living tissues immediately if seen.
In addition, blood can be sampled, and the serum CA 125 may rise (not to the extent that it is anisogenic).
The treatment of membrane isomers is more complex and must be conducted under the guidance of a gynaecologist.
There is a choice between medication or surgical treatment.
The drug is mainly a inhibition of ovarian function and a deterrent to the development of endometriosis. For example, anti-inflammation drugs, oral contraceptives, and pregnancy hormones are used.
The operation is mainly for the removal of the stoves and is applied in cases where the treatment of drugs is ineffective.
It is now considered a gold standard for the identification of abdominal lenses and for surgical and pharmaceutical treatment.
Is the membrane membrane animation affecting fertility?
It’s possible that research shows that about 40% of patients are not pregnant. Patients with uterine membrane isomeric disorders, if infertility occurs, are the first to be operated. Case number: YX11YYOLP5q
I don’t know.
Keep your eyes on the road.