Dysmenorrhea is getting worse and worse? Be careful it’s [chocolate cyst]!

How many girls attribute their dysmenorrhea to a [cold uterus] caused by a [cold] and have to pour hot water or endure it desperately every month when they are miserable? Here, we need to solemnly remind everyone that dysmenorrhea occurs again after menarche, especially if it is getting more and more painful, we must be careful [chocolate cyst]! [Chocolate Cyst] has nothing to do with the chocolate we eat. Its scientific name is [endometriosis], just because the lesion looks like chocolate, and doctors like to name the lesion after what we eat, so it has a greedy common name. [Chocolate Cyst] Is what’s Disease? In short, the endometrium should have grown in the uterus, but it ran to other places Read More …

Extrauterine Pregnancy-Mines on the Road to Good Pregnancy

For women who are ready to become mothers, except for a few who are better pregnant, they can be pregnant by touching them. Many people’s pregnancy process is comparable to a long journey to learn from the experience, full of difficulties and obstacles. Finally, they are pregnant, and it may also be a deadly mine-ectopic pregnancy. Therefore, every expectant mother who has tested [two bars] must not be carried away by victory. Be careful that it is ectopic pregnancy, which will kill people if it is serious. Extrauterine Pregnancy-Bomb that May Detonate at Any Time One day when I came home from work, my wife was practicing yoga. She twisted her waist and asked me, “what happened to ectopic pregnancy?” Read More …

I don’t have gynecological diseases, why should the doctor ask me about my menstrual history?

Just came out of school, the first thing to do when studying clinically is to write medical records. It happened that a patient came, and I took it for granted to ask about the medical history, asking as carefully as possible, for fear of missing important information about what. I came back to report the situation to the teacher. I thought the teacher would praise me. As a result, she asked: [What about the patient’s menstrual history? ] [Ah? What is menstrual history? ] [As a gynecologist, you don’t ask the patient’s menstrual history? ! ] I had to have the cheek to ask the patient again. At that time, I didn’t know how important my menstrual history was. I Read More …