One of my female patients, who suddenly bled in class, fell apart and lay down in cu and couldn’t wake up at any time, and the first time my parents arrived, they asked if it would affect the birth of a child.
The woman was supposed to be in class, went to the toilet, suddenly bled, fell like rain, dyed red on the toilet, and the whole body fell off.
She immediately phoned her husband, who sent her to our hospital as soon as he arrived.
I’m on duty. That was my last class in E.R.
Female patient, 32 years old, newly married, without children. Due to the pressure of both parents, pregnancy preparation has been intensified.
She said that there had been a bloodbath for the last few days, but it wasn’t serious or serious. I was going to come back to the hospital this weekend. I didn’t know there was a sudden bleeding.
I saw her look pale and sweaty and asked the nurse to push her into the rescue room.
The EKG is on the line and the blood pressure is low and the heart rate is high.
The low blood pressure is an indication of the advanced period of shock, and the patient is already in shock, and hemorrhagic shock, which threatens his life at any time.
I couldn’t help but count them:
“You two have a lot of nerve, and this is supposed to hit 120, and you asked your husband to drop your pants and fart. Next time there’s another 120, you’ll get killed. I’m sorry.
The patient indicated that he was bleeding below, in large quantities, and her husband kept asking me if it was an abortion.
The abortion was vaginal haemorrhage, which was described by the patient as anal rectum haemorrhage.
But female under-blooding sometimes requires careful identification. You think it’s rectal anal bleeding, but it’s actually vaginal bleeding that you have to check to know.
However, the patient is shy, and he/she keeps saying that he/she is bleeding and that he/she does not understand what is below and that he/she can only arrange an examination immediately.
In the rescue room, the nurse helped to remove the patient ‘ s pants and, after examination, determined that he was bleeding, bleeding from the digestive tract, not from the vagina, not from an abortion.
The patient himself said that it was blood pulling, which has taken place several times in the past month, and this is the worst case today.
Of course it’s serious. The pants are full of blood and the sheets are red. The nurse changed the sheets once, red again, blood.
The blood pressure has fallen to 88/40mmHg.
What’s the concept of this data? It’s haemorrhagic shock, it’s acute, it’s fatal, it’s blood transfusion-resistant.
The patient’s husband is still asking, isn’t it an abortion?
I’m a little angry, not having an abortion. I can’t get an abortion with a digestive bleeding. Abortion may not be fatal, but if the digestive haemorrhage is not dealt with in a timely manner, it may be lost.
He’s just shut up and stop asking questions about abortion.
Dr. Frepe said the patient lost at least 2000ml blood.
What does that mean? Let’s put it this way, the blood in our adult veins is about 5,000 ml, and if we lose 400 ml in the short term, it’s usually okay, but if we exceed 800 ml, it’s possible to go into shock.
The patient has lost more blood than 2000ml, which is definitely shock, very dangerous.
If the blood capacity is not replenished in a timely manner, the patient will soon die of an ischaemic oxin coma!
I ordered Dr. Pieper to do a blood test, contact blood transfusions, blood, red cells, blood plasma.
The patient’s husband was probably frightened by our situation.
He doesn’t understand how a wife can be nice this morning, and blood is no big deal.
I can’t explain it to him. I can’t help but comfort him. He can’t fall. He’s saved. He’s got a lot to sign.
In order to make him feel better, I asked him to wait outside and formally notified him of his illness.
He said, albeit at any cost, that no matter how much it was spent, it was important to save people.
I can’t guarantee it, but I’ll do my best. That’s what I said.
There is no disease that can be guaranteed in the emergency section. It is too short a time. It is too often undecided.
There must be no guarantees for the family, and this is a lesson of blood.
I told him that, in the meantime, in addition to resupplying patients as soon as possible, it was crucial to find out where the bleeding was and stop it immediately.
We can’t stop the bleeding in the emergency section, and we need to get in touch with the indigent.
Indigestion physicians have endoscopes, and much of the indigestion haemorrhage requires an end to the bleeding under the endoscope, either by burning or plastering, which will not help with a few endovenants alone.
The name of the stopper sounds great, actually hemorrhaging, which is like a grandson.
He knows how to nod his head and his lips are shaking.
After we sign, we’ll continue with the patient.
At this point, the patient’s consciousness began to blur and the answer was not clear when asked where she was feeling ill.
In other words, the patient has reached a foot into the door.
The indigestion physician then arrived in a hurry and the abdomen of the patients were more active, confirming that the indigestion was bleeding.
But what part of the body is bleeding? Another challenge.
The digestive tracts are divided into upper and lower parts. The upper digestive tract begins with the mouth and continues until the oesophagus diarrhea is partially emptied of the intestines (in the context of the twilight band).
The lower digestive tract is the emptiness of the bowel rectum, which is generally referred to as the emptiness, which is better understood up, down and down.
The indigestion physician believed that the patient was bleeding in the lower digestive tract, especially if it was likely that the colon could have bleeding, otherwise so much red would not have been pulled, and suggested that colonoscopy be done immediately.
If a mirror enters to see a blood spot, stop the bleeding immediately.
The indigestion physician’s suggestion is quite correct.
The patient’s husband had no choice but to make repeated statements, to do whatever he can and to sign. Money’s not a problem. It’s a big deal.
In order to prove that he was a sincere healer, he paid a $100,000 deposit at the charge point.
We’re both stupid. He’s afraid we won’t be active.
When everything’s ready, you’re ready to go to the endoscope.
And then the blood from the blood bank came and I quickly gave it to you.
And I was as if a guard of the city, waiting for the reinforcements, had the blood products not been delivered in time, and the patient was bleeding, it would have been like a mountain.
The colonoscopy, while working well, does not mean that it can be done right away, and it takes at least a few minutes to get the last mirror into the patient.
But at this point, I was a little hesitant to pull right into the mirror room? The blood pressure’s a little low. What if something happens to the mirror?
The digestive internalist and I were thinking about going with me and saying maybe we should go to ICU and do it.
The last time a bleeding patient had an anesthesia, he had a tremor and saved a few minutes of his life, but he became a vegetable for a long time.
I know it.
Not only am I afraid, but also the digestive internalist himself. No one can say anything about surprises. We must be prepared and confident.
And finally, the digestive physician suggested, under close supervision of the ICTU, that we make her colonoscopy and see if we can stop the bleeding.
I agree, yes, in case of a broken heart or any other accident, we can organize an efficient rescue. There’s Dr. ICTU escorting, and doing it would be more reassuring.
Then it’s gonna be trouble for ICU’s doctor.
But as we were getting ready for ICU, the patient was unconscious and the call was dead.
The patient’s husband cried out of fear. The nurse brought him out of the rescue room, in case it affected us.
My heart speaks of my voice. I don’t think it’s too late to be an intestinesman. That would be awful.
Dr. ICTU arrived in a few minutes, and after the assessment, he picked up the patient very quickly.
It’s a matter for them to do. ICU is not a safe, but they have a lot of rescue equipment, a lot of tools and, for the patient, an extra layer of insurance.
Of course, if the bleeding doesn’t stop, it won’t work. He also told his family that ICU could only provide a rescue site and not guarantee that the patient would survive.
The patient’s husband signed another letter and agreed to ICU.
On ICU, the patient’s blood pressure stabilized further because of the rapid blood transfusion.
But hemorrhaging hasn’t stopped completely yet, and he’ll bleed out of his anus from time to time.
Look at the red blood coming out of the patient’s anus, it’s like a knife. We all hate to reach out and choke the bleeding.
It’s so easy.
The indigestion internalist pushed his endoscope.
Dr. ICTU had intubated the patient with a trachea, which was safe.
Since the patient is in a coma, it cannot be ruled out as a brain problem, and in the event of a brain haemorrhage or brain infarction, the next step may affect the respiratory centre with respiratory failure.
Also, patients in coma are prone to missorption, and the presence of tube intubation protection reduces the probability of missorption and the incidence of pneumonia.
The family agreed to go into ICU and sign it.
The colonoscopy enters through the patient’s anus and sees the rectal, the beta colon, the lower colon, the transectal colon, the upper colon…
I’ve seen it many times, I’ve washed it many times, but I haven’t seen the point of bleeding.
The digestive physicians are crying.
Why?
I’ve analyzed that it’s probably not a colon hemorrhage at all, that the colon mirrors can only look at the colon, and they can’t look at the upper ones, but they’re so thick and so long, and they can’t see it.
Maybe the point of bleeding is in the empty intestines. Even stomach haemorrhage can lead to defecation, but in general stomach, mediocre haemorrhage is less likely to cause red defecation and usually black defecation.
Why? As a result of haemorrhage in the intestinal tube, which is as high as the stomach and the 12-finger bowel, the blood is removed from the anus after several metres of intestine intestines. It is long gone, it is digested into the intestinal tract and turned black.
Dr. ICTU suggested, would you like to have a stomach mirror?
It’s a desperate choice. There’s nothing wrong with the intestinal mirrors, and there’s probably something to do with the stomach mirrors, but there’s only one step to go.
Unfortunately, the stomach mirror didn’t show any problems.
So, maybe there’s an vascular fracture in the middle digestive tract, and there’s haemorrhage, and our gastrointestinal lenses can’t reach it, so we can’t stop the bleeding.
Fortunately, the bleeding stopped itself.
Vital signs are stabilizing.
The next day I went back to ICU, and I volunteered to stay with the patient.
Looks like I’m a lucky man, and the chief said that as soon as I got back, the patient woke up, pulled out the bronchial intubation and the bleeding seemed to have stopped.
In that case, let’s pull out and do a CT, sweep it from the head to the abdomen, see if there’s anything unusual.
After all, the patient had a coma before, and if it was a coma caused by low blood pressure, it would be better if there were diseases such as brain bleeding or brain infarction.
Also, digestive haemorrhaging can be a dirty instrument, and it’s more reassuring to be a CT.
Roll it out and do it, but there’s still nothing.
The head is intact and the stomach is not abnormal. The only anomaly is that there’s a little white shadow in the pancreas, which is probably a rock, but it’s small, but it’s probably a pseudonym, and it’s unlikely there’s bleeding.
I’m a little disappointed.
What we can’t imagine is that that afternoon the patients started to bleed again.
I’m big, too, and it seems that the patient’s not bleeding is just a sign, and after all, there’s no real bleeding stove.
After a blood transfusion, the patient ‘ s condition remained generally stable, i.e., the reason for the haemorrhage was unknown and the location unknown.
I told the director that if he didn’t look for the intervention doctor, he might come and see where he was bleeding.
The Director agreed with my suggestion.
But the family doesn’t understand what intervention is. Is your life in danger? That’s his concern now.
I told him that the patient was already ill, that life-saving measures could be considered at that time, and that she was already in danger if you thought of help, not danger.
The reason for the initial suspicion was that the patient ‘ s blood was in the intestine, which could have been the result of a fracture of one of the vessels inside the intestines, resulting in haemorrhage.
The principle of intervention is simple, it’s a reflection of the veins of the intestines.
First, an artery puncture is done on the root of the patient ‘ s thigh, then a catheter is placed in the artery, followed by the catheter into the photocopying agent, which flows through the artery of the intestine, and where there is an vascular fracture and bleeding, which is also leaked.
We can catch this hemorrhage in X-rays and then fill it with something to stop it and block it, so that we can stop it.
When the patient’s husband listens, he seems to know the place.
The parents of the patient came and asked if there were side effects of this intervention that would affect the future birth of a child.
I can’t stop crying. I’m talking about having a baby. Of course, intervention itself will not affect the birth of children.
Later I realized that the patient was an only child and that parents were expecting her to have more children, but that fate was to tease them, to get married a few years ago, without any movement in her stomach.
She’s pregnant recently, and she’s ready for a test.
Of course, intervention is not all-powerful, and there is a risk that hemorrhaging can not be detected, or even if it does, it may not stop well, and I remind families of the need to prepare for this.
The patient’s husband signed, everything was ready, the green passage was open and the patient was sent to intervene while he was bleeding.
Everyone is waiting for the intervention doctor to end the bleeding problem.
Because no problems were found in the gastrointestinal lenses, which meant that hemorrhagic veins were digestive, and only intervention could lead to a cause-and-effect vein.
As long as the film maker enters from the veins, and then looks at the leaking agent, where the veins are broken, and then the small spring embolisms, etc., are pushed in and blocked and the blood can stop.
The intervention doctors were able to do their job, but they could not speak to their families. After all, there were accidents. You said you’d find a problem and deal with it. If you don’t, you’ll have a face.
That’s the word.
The intervention doctor was sweating a lot on the stage, his clothes were wet and dry and wet, and he did not see any blood vessels broken.
Don’t say it’s obvious. It’s just a tiny mouth.
The Chief of Intervention is on the stage.
Fortunately, the patient’s blood pressure is holding, and no visible blood has been seen. Otherwise, blood pressure falls on the stage.
It didn’t happen. It’s tragic that you’ve lost your blood point, you’ve lost your blood pressure, you’ve lost your heart rate, you’ve even had a heart attack.
Good luck today, this has not happened.
But I didn’t see any bleeding.
I quickly reported to the director that no blood was seen in the stomach mirrors, intestines, interventions, whether it stopped itself or not, or if it was found.
The director frowned, lit a cigarette (no one learns), said that it was bad news, and stopped the bleeding, which meant that the patient would bleed again.
This undiscovered hemorrhage is a time bomb. You have no idea when it’s coming out.
It’s been a long time since I’ve been involved. I can’t find the bloodthirsty. The intervention doctor said he could have stopped the bleeding himself, could not see the broken mouth, could not stop the bleeding and had to wait.
What do you mean you have to wait? Families don’t understand.
The next time he bleeds, then re-involves, hemorrhages may be found.
As if the police had caught the thief, now that he’s gone, you can’t catch him and we’ll get him when he gets out and we’ll get him in time.
Probably so.
I’m more common, and they understand.
There was no problem with the intervention, the parents of the patients were already a little unhappy, the patients spent money and took risks.
No way, disease is like this, not always smooth. It’s also a good thing we haven’t talked about anything since we didn’t know what the problem was.
I’m exhausted by the fact that when I got back to ICU, the patient said it wasn’t right, the stomach was a little hurt, and I wanted to pull. Can you get out of bed?
Of course not. How can ICU patients get out of bed? People are sober, but they could bleed at any time.
I’ve just lost my voice, and the patient’s face is sorely staring at me, he’s out.
Let’s open the covers and look at it.
The patient’s bleeding!
It’s really torture. It’s torture for the patient himself, for her family and for us.
The director was also helpless and the patient would be finished if he could not find a blood stove to stop the bleeding in time.
There’s no other way. There’s only a diarrhea. The chief said to contact the surgeon.
I asked the director if he wanted to try to intervene first.
The Director shook his head and said that if he intervened or found no problems, the family would go mad.
The patient may have had a very small vascular hemorrhage, which could have flowed to a certain extent, not necessarily in the short term, and her blood pressure remains stable.
Such a small vascular haemorrhage may not be visible, even if there are more interventions.
The Director ‘ s analysis makes sense.
Then call a surgeon. It’s usually the last move.
After the surgeon came in, he assessed, and heard that the gastrointestinal lenses had not detected any bleeding, said what to do, and pushed the operation, so that we could open her belly as long as the family agreed.
I got a family to explain to them the need for surgery.
In general, a digestive haemorrhage is handled first by a conservative internal medicine approach, and if none is possible, a caesarean section is considered, after all, because the trauma of the operation is too large and not necessary to be carried out easily.
The parents strongly rejected the risk of surgery, said that one of the patients had an uncle who had died as a result of surgery, that the bodies had been taken to cremate and that they could not return home.
I say that any treatment is risky, and of course there is a risk of surgery now, but the risk of not doing it is also high, and the benefits of doing it are far greater than the harm.
The surgeons have come and said, probably, but the surgeons are calm, and they say, “Don’t hesitate if you don’t give your family a happy word,” if they’re just as hesitant as their families and don’t know how many have died.
The patient’s husband agreed to the operation, but it is clear that this time he is not the subject. The final decision is in the hands of the parents.
But they have nowhere to go.
If there was no surgery, there would be only one more risk of intervention, but this intervention might have been futile.
I don’t know how they talked about it, but after 10 minutes, they asked me out, and the parents took their lives.
The day the patient’s mother went home, and I realized that she was going home to burn the incense. No one else can do this, no one else can do it, no one must do it, or Buddha won’t show up.
To be honest, I also want Buddha to show.
But I know it’s still up to us and the surgeon.
The patient’s husband, the middle-aged man, finally cried in the reception room.
Cry and cry and sign and surgery.
The surgeons learned that the patient ‘ s family had agreed to the operation and called their director, who would have been better off in this complex case.
The operation started, the no-shadow light went on.
When the chief of surgery opened the patient ‘ s stomach, he thought it would be easy to detect the patient ‘ s problems, but he did not expect to see any visible haemorrhages, either inside or outside.
I guess they’re in the same mood as the intervention surgeons, and they’re in the same mood as the digestive internal surgeons, so they run through their chests, just three words, they want to scold their mothers.
I was on stage, and I couldn’t find the bleeding, and I was depressed.
Damn it.
The chief of surgery did an analysis, saying that we saw no bleeding outside the intestines, but not in the intestines.
We can’t always cut open all our intestines, but we can open small holes in the intestines, put the inner mirrors in, and always have the chance to find out.
That’s a really good idea.
They chose the middle of the intestinal tract, opened a small mouth, then extended the inner lens into it, went up to the empty intestines, twelve fingers of the intestines and even to the stomach.
There’s no bleeding down there.
Several doctors are sweating.
Oh, my God, where’s the bleeding? I took a look at the patient’s EKG.
The director suddenly shouted, “Good guy, it was hidden here.” This empty intestine has a few small hemorrhaging points, the size of a grain of rice, which, if you don’t look carefully, is very easy to leak.
The director got excited and looked at it again, and, uh, there were a few small hemorrhaging spots, some red, too small, probably smaller than the grain of rice.
I’m a little confused. It’s a very small hemorrhage. Can you explain the amount of hemorrhaging?
The Chief of Surgery said that smallness was smaller, but that there were more than a few, which could indeed cause haemorrhage.
And the patient’s bleeding has been temporarily suspended, so the point of bleeding appears vague and understandable.
There’s nothing wrong with the whole intestinal. That should be it.
Several points of haemorrhage followed, the director decided to cut off the intestinal tube, and it lasted 15 cm in total, cut it off and abandoned it, and then match the intestinal tube at both ends.
Severing the intestines, surgeons often do it, and bad intestines are a scourge, rather than cutting off a hundred.
I’m also worried about the impact of having one intestine less, and the director says that it’s not so big, that it’s negligible when compared to bleeding. The body’s intestines are several metres long, 15 cm short.
The operation is over.
Everyone’s relieved. Several surgeons’ clothes are wet.
Families see 15 cms of intestines cut out, they’re probably in a bad mood, and they certainly love and hate them.
Fortunately, there was no further haemorrhage during the patient ‘ s stay in the hospital, and the haemoglobin was steadily rising, and people were sobered up and eventually transferred to surgery to continue to recover.
Looks like it’s really that little intestinal vascular thing, and it’s gonna be okay when the whole section breaks. At first, I was worried about the bleeding. I thought I was blind.
I heard the patient was well recovered and ready to leave.
However, just the night before the discharge, the patient ‘ s condition had changed again.
And yet another dangerous change that almost cost his life.
It’s too difficult to write a script like this once again, and again, it’s a bloodbath.
By the time the surgeon told me to go to the meeting, the patient was in shock and unconscious.
The patient’s husband cried again, and the parents were absent this time because it was late at night.
I asked them to send ICU as a rehydration, and urgently called a few other specialist consultations to discuss the response, to see if immediate surgery was needed to stop the bleeding.
The Chief of Surgery came back, he was tanned, and he couldn’t believe that he was bleeding.
The patient ‘ s husband called his father-in-law and the elderly said that they would have to wait until they arrived at the hospital to make a decision.
The last time he was sent in, he regretted it, and it had been proven that the operation was not effective, otherwise a second haemorrhage would not have occurred.
Everybody’s stuck.
Well, let’s go to the ICU first, and we can save it if our heart stops.
The director came back and turned over his old C.T. film, and thought there was something wrong with the little rock on the pancreas that was on the last shot. For so long, you’ve been ignoring the pancreas.
The director pushed the machine and gave the patient abdominal to see if there was anything else.
The Director had previously been specializing in the field for six months, and our Section had been doing a few years of the lottery for its own patients, for which the Director had experience.
The chief just wanted to see if the insulin rocks had increased or slipped out. Nobody knows. But it was this random lottery that discovered the big problem.
The director said that the insulin of the patient seemed to be larger, that the insulin expansion was more pronounced and that there were rocks in it. Could be insulin bleeding.
When I heard, I was blinded, and the last time I had a C.T., the C.T. also saw the pancreas with stones, but at the time they thought they were stable and everyone didn’t think it was possible to bleed out.
This time, it looks like you’re gonna hit your face.
Insulin haemorrhage is too low a chance to see several in a lifetime. So you didn’t think about it.
If it’s really an insulin hemorrhage, call the stomach mirror.
Insulin, which is one of the pipes in pancreas, which is the duct for post-circumcubation and distribution of pancreatic fluids, can be understood as the highway in the pancreas.
The pancreas are opened in the 12-finger intestine, i.e., the fluid from pancreas would flow into the 12-finger intestine through the pancreas. Of course, if the insulin bleeds, the blood flows to the 12-finger intestines.
And we make gastric mirrors, except for the stomach, and we can look down a little.
So, stomach mirrors are essential at this point in time.
The stomach mirror doctor is here. The emergency is making a bedside stomach mirror. The mirror passes through the patient’s mouth, enters the stomach, turns again, enters the intestines…
When you saw it, you finally identified the real perpetrators.
The stomach mirrors see blood coming out of the nipples of the 12-finger intestine, which is the most likely to come from insulin. Because the export of the pancreas is the titty.
“Don’t say too much, it’s an insulin hemorrhage. The doctor in the inner mirror said a few words.
I’m confused. Then why didn’t you find the stomach glasses last time?
The haemorrhages were not instantaneous and could have been intermittent. And the last time the focus was probably on the stomach instead of the 12-finger intestines, and this time on the 12-finger intestines, especially on the big nipples, after all, our director suspected that there might be insulin haemorrhage and that a targeted look would be easier to detect.
What should we do? If it’s an insulin hemorrhage, it looks like he’s still in surgery.
I told the patient’s husband, he agreed to the operation, but my father-in-law did not.
Those two are so old-fashioned. But at the same time I thought I was wrong, cut 15 cm, which would have been uncut, and why they hesitated.
Soon, the parents arrived.
First he scolded his son-in-law and then he complained about us.
It’s a good thing our chief and the chief of surgery went out and explained it to them, so they got rid of two old people.
The chief of surgery told them frankly that the 15-cm intestines of the last time were not necessarily the problem, and today this pancreas is the killer.
The patient’s husband was scared to ask if he was sure it was bleeding.
There’s one thing in his mouth that he didn’t dare say. Last time it said the intestines were bleeding and cut 15 cm. This time, the pancreatic tissue will be cut.
The Chief of Surgery explained that the patient had diagnosed the insulin haemorrhage, which, by definition, also belonged to the upper digestive tract, but that the incubine was located in a special and marginal position.
What we usually say about upper digestive tracts is highways like oesophagus, stomachs, 12-finger intestines, and it rarely comes to mind that the country road next to the highway is also upper digestive.
But it’s not cut, it’s cut. We can’t ignore the right thing because we made a mistake last time.
The family eventually agreed to the operation.
Patient parents have been praying at the door for Buddha’s blessing.
The surgeon looked at it this time, clearly and clearly, and had an insulin intestines.
It’s good after the surgery.
After six months, there was no further haemorrhage. Looks like this is a real solution. Surgeons are upset, too, with 15 centimetres of intestines cut in white, and although the intestines also have a point of bleeding, they’re probably not the main killer, but they don’t cut it. It would be difficult if the family were to cause trouble.
But then again, if every operation is to ensure that the doctor is not mistaken and is punished for any mistake, it also seems unfair to the doctor that it is a human body, not a cell phone.
The dilemma.
Cope classroom: what’s going on?
What’s the common reason for this?
There are many causes, most common of which are hemorrhoids, rectal cancer, colon cancer, anal fractures, intestinal nodules, vascular cancers, etc., and it is difficult for ordinary people to distinguish between the causes of constipated blood, and even professional doctors do not know the causes of constipated blood.
But if you have hemorrhoids, then most of the blood is caused by hemorrhoids, which, if accompanied by pain, may be a hemorrhage or anal fracture, do not cause small bleeding problems, and the haemorrhage must go to a hospital to find out what the reason is, may be colonoscopy, rectal fingering, etc.
What’s the difference between black shit and blood?
Black defecation and blood are all digestive haemorrhages, but unlike the two, the general blackness means upper digestive haemorrhages, such as stomach haemorrhage or 12-finger intestine haemorrhage, because the digestive tract is long, and if it is the first haemorrhage, the blood is absorbed through the whole digestive tract, and the red blood becomes black. So most haemorrhaging in the upper digestive tract is black shit.
The lower digestive tract has haemorrhage, such as colon cancer, or hemorrhage, which is closer to the anus, and the blood will soon come out through the anus and will not be able to absorb metabolism, so the blood will be red and fresh.
But this is not always the case, and sometimes there is red defecation, such as haemorrhage in the upper digestive tract, because of the magnitude of the haemorrhage, and many blood is released directly before metabolic absorption. The specific part, the stomach mirror, the intestinal mirror, is clear.
If it’s indigestion, then there’s no way, because the gastric and intestinal lenses are out of reach and only the capsules are considered. It’s like a capsule, it eats it, it shoots it in the digestive tract, and then pulls it out, and you can take a good look at it, and if there’s blood in the digestive tract, it’s usually found. In a few cases, it was difficult to find out.
Does blood kill you?
Small quantities of defecation, small problems, such as haemorrhage and colon cancer, are generally small and not fatal. However, if hemorrhage is massive, such as stomach ulcer, ulcer of the 12-finger ulcer, ectoplasmic carcinoma, and haemorrhage, it is possible to have haemorrhagic shock at a time when the patient is in a state of panic, cold sweat, etc., and must be treated in hospital as soon as possible.
How do you avoid your own blood?
This is difficult, because it is impossible to avoid every disease because there are so many diseases that cause blood. But the most common diseases of constipated blood are hemorrhoids, colon cancer, ulcer with a 12-finger intestine, ulcer with a stomach, so there are ways to deal with them. Hemorrhoids, for example, require the prevention of constipation, the consumption of fresh vegetables and fruits and the development of good poop habits.
Where’s the stomach ulcer? Then we’ll have to stop drinking, eat a little less, get an early stomach mirror and take positive medication to avoid an ulcer and bleeding.
There’s no good way to predict rectal cancer, but it’s early, 40 years old, and it’s best to check the colon lens every 2-3 years. Record number: YXA1GwJP5n2tL34zEOmi0l02
I don’t know.
Keep your eyes on the road.