Puerperal infection

Purperanthal infection is an infectious disease that can occur during and after childbirth. The infection can lead to serious complications such as uterine infection, endometritis, sepsis and others. In this article we will look at what Purperant infection is, symptoms, causes and methods of treating this disease.

Puerperia infection is a condition characterized by the development of a postpartum inflammatory reaction of the uterine structures, caused by their infection, without damage to the lining epithelium of the uterus and developing after childbirth [1].

Puerpatral infection refers to purulent-inflammatory diseases of the pelvic organs that occur in women in the postpartum period or during surgical childbirth. This is a severe socially significant complication of childbirth, since about 80% of it causes death, possible infertility, or the need to remove organs due to the critical condition of the woman. Prevention of puerpatral infection is a rather complex and at the same time important task for obstetricians-gynecologists and neonatologists. The most important measure in the prevention of puerpotral infection is the rational management of the birth operation using methods that reduce the number of cesarean sections, in particular with the inclusion of antiplatelet agents in the preparation of the woman in labor in order to reduce the incidence of hematomas of the genital organs.