I'd like to know what kind of medical operation in a young lady leads to viginal bleeding?
the subject reportedly had enemia, was then operated and accordingly in need of 6 weeks to recover, I am not sure if it was aborted pregnancy or not that she was hiding from me. I live in a different country
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Answers:
Anytime a woman undergoes surgery of the vaginal area, it will require six weeks of recovery. A D&C (dilation and curettage) could either be to remove products of conception or backed up periods - both lead to vaginal bleeding. Uterine ablation could also lead to vaginal bleeding, this is the process to remove cysts/fibroids in the uterus. It could be any number of procedures, but all procedures on the vaginal area lead to bleeding and the need for the long recovery/repair of the vaginal area.
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If this person wanted you to know they would tell you. You are jumping to conclusions. There are several operations which can result in vaginal bleeding.
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Maybe it was just her period. Menstruation - having periods - is part of the female reproductive cycle that starts when girls become sexually mature at the time of puberty.
During a menstrual period, a woman bleeds from her uterus (womb) via the vagina. This lasts anything from three to seven days. Each period commences approximately every 28 days if the woman does not become pregnant during a given cycle.
Menstruation is a very complicated process involving many different hormones, the woman's sex organs and the brain.
A woman's internal sex organs consist of two ovaries, the Fallopian tubes, the uterus (womb) and the vagina. The ovaries contain the eggs with which the woman is born and, during each period, a single egg will usually ripen and mature due to the action of hormones circulating in the bloodstream.
When the egg is mature it bursts from the ovary and drifts through the Fallopian tube down into the uterus. The lining of the uterus - the endometrium - has been thickened by the action of hormones and made ready to receive the fertilised egg.
If the egg is fertilized and the woman becomes pregnant, it will fasten itself onto the endometrium. If the egg is not fertilized, however, resultant hormonal changes cause the endometrium to slip away and menstruation begins.
Menstrual discharge is composed of the endometrium itself, together with a little fresh blood caused by the breaking of very fine blood vessels within the endometrium as it detaches itself from the inside of the uterus.
The amount of blood lost due to the normal monthly period is usually less than 80ml. These days, girls begin to menstruate when they are about 10 to 14 years-old. The average age is approximately 12. Women will continue to menstruate until the age of 45 to 55, when menopause begins. A woman will have approximately 500 periods in her lifetime.
edmetirosis, or the back up of menstral material in the uterus. often requires a D&C, which will cause bleeding and long recovery times.
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