Bleeding Parenchymal

What kind of hemorrhage is this - parenchyma? During pregnancy, quite heavy bleeding may occur. This is bleeding from the intestinal parenchyma. Every pregnancy can end in death, in particular in cases of placental separation after 28 weeks in a multiparous woman. Several sections are torn off at the same time. One of the variants of postpartum sepsis of placental origin, caused not only by local, but also by general changes during pregnancy. According to the type of mechanism (the way microorganisms exist in the body), they can be infectious (inflammatory) or non-infectious (non-inflammatory). In domestic medicine, the section of pathology is called “tissue pathomorphology”, in contrast to foreign pathology, which includes this concept in the clinical section (the generally accepted division into “infectious” and “non-infectious diseases”). These statements may sound like a contradiction, but in fact they should complement each other. The farther the placenta ruptures from the organ along the path of anastomosis, the more people surrounding the pregnant woman will suffer. Spastic contraction of the intestines and abdominal wall and the low location of the placenta causes the contents of the large intestine to exit through the inguinal canal into the vagina. The contents of the intestine contain a microbial formation with pronounced virulent properties, including the possibility of infection of the skin, oral cavity, eyes and respiratory tract. Subsequently, the placental mass is released during normal contractions. Before childbirth, overstretching of the lower part of the uterus is possible due to transfusion of the head of the fetal-uterine septum, and its rupture. The membranes of the fertilized egg are also released due to contraction of the abdominal press. The emerging sections of intestinal contents, together with a flap of fetal placental tissue, form two open torn openings with small pieces of chorion (“omphaltus”), which have different meanings (volume of intestinal damage): small