The influence of uterine prolapse?

Update Date: Source: Network

summary

Now more and more female friends have uterine prolapse disease. Uterine prolapse is what we usually call uterine prolapse. This disease also has a great impact on women's physical and mental health. If women have too much sex or other bad personal hygiene habits, it is easy to have this disease. What harm may be caused after uterine shedding? Let's take a look at the following.

The influence of uterine prolapse?

Uterine prolapse has a certain impact on uterine prolapse, uterine prolapse is divided into three degrees, generally I or II degree uterine prolapse patients still have the possibility of pregnancy, if not handled properly, after treatment may still be pregnant. Severe uterine prolapse patients are often infertile, because semen is not easy to accumulate in the vaginal condyle, uterine prolapse patients are often complicated with cervical hypertrophy and chronic cervicitis.

Dumping the uterus backward often leads to fallopian tube regression. The position variation of the ovarian fallopian tube can lead to pelvic vein deformation, poor blood flow, pelvic vein congestion, menorrhagia, abdominal bulge, back pain, and some women can also have sexual pain and other symptoms.

The shape of the back of the uterus is like a teapot. The cervix is the position of the teapot mouth, higher than the uterine cavity of the basin. The menstrual blood in the uterine cavity is difficult to be discharged from the pelvic floor through the cervical canal. In order to discharge the menstrual blood in pelvic cavity, we should only strengthen the uterine contraction and compress the volume of uterine cavity to extract menstrual blood. Therefore, women behind the uterus often have spasmodic uterine muscle contraction and dysmenorrhea.

matters needing attention

Uterine prolapse can lead to endometriosis in women. As mentioned earlier, menopausal women often need to strengthen uterine contraction during menstruation to force menstrual blood through the cervical canal. The increase of contraction will inevitably lead to the increase of intrauterine pressure. Under high pressure, part of the menstrual blood may return to the pelvis through the fallopian tube, leading to endometriosis.