Staz Serous

**Staz** is a stop in the movement of blood cells (red blood cells), extracellular fluid (lymph, cerebrospinal fluid) and bile.

Normally, all these fluids flow freely through the vessels of the body's tissues. But sometimes movement fails, so stasis is called “stagnation.”

Where does this pathology come from? Most often, stasis is associated with disturbances in the hematopoietic system or heart function. In this case, the blood partially stagnates in the veins of the pelvic organs (external and internal genital veins, venous pelvis).

> A lack of blood supply to tissues contributes to their degeneration, ischemia, hypoxia, and this is a direct path to the development of diseases (heart attack, congestive heart failure, etc.). The body needs help.

The insidiousness of this disease is that it is difficult to diagnose. It has various reasons.