03/07/2026
@topfans
"What's wrong, Mom?"
"The girl bled. She's fine now. When I came to the OPD, I had a clinic. That's why I came."
It was something that happened when I was a medical student when I was making a gyne appointment.
We have to ask the details of the patients who come to the clinic and present it to the sir. The patient I had that day was a mother of about 70 years old. When I asked the details, she said that she was bleeding from the va**na. Even though I wanted to check it, the patient didn't want to.
I wrote down the details in a book and waited for the sir to come. After the sir came, we stood around the sir and waited. When a patient came in, our person who saw that patient had to present the patient to the sir.
My patient came in. Now it was my turn.
I came forward and started telling the details, saying, "Sir, this patient has come in with bleeding from the va**na...."
After my story, the sir started asking the patient for details.
"My va**na is coming out like a tumor," I told the doctor.
What I've been told is a single lump 😡😡
Sir suddenly looked at me. I lied without asking the patient for details, didn't I? Sir had a look like that.
Now let's check it out and put her on the bed. A tumor the size of a tennis ball came out of the va**na.
Today, about prolapse of the uterus...
Our pelvis, or the uterus in the lower abdomen, is held in place by a strong support like a "net" made of muscles and tissues. When these muscles weaken, those organs start to protrude towards or out of the va**na. This is called prolapse of the uterus.
There are many reasons why this happens.
1️⃣ Having children regularly.
Having several children causes the muscles to stretch.
2️⃣ Aging and menopause reduce the strength of those tissues.
3️⃣Frequent straining or heavy lifting due to constipation.
4️⃣Frequent coughing due to diseases such as asthma increases pressure inside the abdomen.
5️⃣Excessive obesity.
In the early stages, symptoms may be largely absent. But as the condition progresses,
🎈Feeling like there