Internal bleeding

Introduction

Introduction Internal bleeding is a type of bleeding, and the blood flowing out of the blood vessels stays inside the body without being discharged to the outside of the body, such as cerebral hemorrhage, adrenal hemorrhage, and pancreatic hemorrhage. Internal hemorrhage refers to the blood vessels in the internal organs and organs, often including hemoptysis, hematemesis, blood in the stool, hematuria, vaginal bleeding and so on. Anyone with the above bleeding should go to the hospital for help. Identify serious internal bleeding as soon as possible: After the injury, the patient's skin is pale, damp, indifferent, whisperless, shallow, irritated, thirsty, but no wounds on the body.

Cause

Cause

1. Violence.

2, high blood pressure.

3, caused by the disease of the organ.

Examine

an examination

Related inspection

Platelet activation marker platelet activating factor magnetic resonance spectroscopy imaging platelet adhesion function

First of all, physical examination, and then with mechanical inspection, can carry out various aspects of blood tests, and also need to cooperate with X-ray, CT inspection. After obtaining the results of the examination, it is combined with the clinical manifestations of the damage of each organ to determine which organ has a problem.

Diagnosis

Differential diagnosis

1. Hypertensive intraventricular hemorrhage: Most patients with hypertensive intraventricular hemorrhage have a history of obvious hypertension, sudden onset of middle-aged or older, relatively severe disturbance of consciousness, hemiplegia and aphasia are more obvious, and cerebral angiography without intracranial Aneurysms and malformed blood vessels.

2. Intracranial neoplastic intraventricular hemorrhage: more common in adults, where the intraventricular hemorrhage recovery process is not typical or intraventricular hemorrhage in the acute phase of brain edema subsided, the consciousness or positioning signs are not improved, the body found bilateral optic disc edema and other chronic intracranial pressure increased Performance, or the presence of intracranial space-occupying lesions or post-operative radiotherapy for patients with brain tumors, should consider the possibility of intracerebral hemorrhage caused by hemorrhage of brain tumors. If necessary, CT enhanced scan can be confirmed.

The material in this site is intended to be of general informational use and is not intended to constitute medical advice, probable diagnosis, or recommended treatments.

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