Two middle-aged women had more than menstruation, a sudden brain hemorrhage, and a shock, and the test results were unexpectedly leukemia. Recently, Dalian Central Hospital has seen two consecutive patients with atypical symptoms of leukemia, one of whom thought it was menopause and did not think about leukemia at all. Not long ago, Ms. Zhang, in her forties, went to the gynecology department of the Central Hospital because she was still bleeding after 2 weeks of menstruation. During the consultation, her right arm and right leg suddenly would not move, sudden cerebral hemorrhage, and is in critical condition, doctors immediately sent her to the ICU ward. With heavy menstrual bleeding and sudden cerebral hemorrhage, it is very unlikely that a person would have two serious diseases at the same time. At this time, the blood count showed that her white blood cell count was more than seven times the normal value, so the medical staff rushed to ask the hematologist for a consultation, and after the bone puncture, chromosome, fusion gene and other tests, the diagnosis was confirmed as M3 leukemia, and this brain hemorrhage was also caused by the onset of leukemia. Before Ms. Zhang was discharged from the hospital, 50-year-old Ms. Zhou was also admitted to the hematology ward. Before she was admitted to the hospital, one of her periods lasted for nearly 2 weeks and the bleeding was heavy every day. At first she thought it was menopause and did not care, but gradually she developed symptoms such as vertigo and fainting, and finally developed to the point where she could not get up at all, and only then did she visit the obstetrics and gynecology department. The examination showed that her hemoglobin and hematocrit were extremely low, and she had developed hemorrhagic anemia and hemorrhagic shock, which made her situation very dangerous. Doctors transfused 1,200 ml of blood during the resuscitation process, and the test results showed that Ms. Zhou had M3 leukemia, and her condition gradually subsided through systematic blood therapy in conjunction with gynecological treatment. Atypical symptoms are ignored In many people’s impression, high fever and weakness are the common symptoms of leukemia patients, but Lian Shimei, director of the Department of Hematology at Dalian Central Hospital, said that many leukemia patients have less typical symptoms after the onset of the disease, but rather joint pain, anemia, bleeding and other symptoms, bleeding sites can be throughout the body, including the nasal cavity, mouth, gums, subcutaneous, under the eyes, etc., which can easily be misdiagnosed. While leukemia can cause patients to have coagulation disorders leading to excessive bleeding, so when patients are found to be ineffective with conventional treatment, they must be thoroughly examined to rule out the cause of blood disorders. For women in particular, if symptoms manifest as heavy menstruation, younger women are generally a little more alert, while older women often think they are in menopause and ignore it. In leukemia-induced irregular menstruation, the amount of bleeding is often several times the normal amount, so women should always go to the hospital once they notice the abnormality. The cerebral hemorrhage that occurred in Ms. Zhou was caused by a special substance secreted in the human blood after she developed leukemia, which acted on the cerebral blood vessels, but it was good that Ms. Zhou was in the hospital at the time of the onset and was treated quickly and effectively, otherwise it could have led to serious consequences due to coagulation dysfunction that caused more than bleeding. Lian Shimei said, fortunately, both suffer from M3 type leukemia, the menacing bleeding was controlled, the situation has stabilized, and then about two years of continuous medication, leukemia can basically be cured. One of the two patients belonged to a farm worker and had a history of pesticide exposure. The company’s main business is the development of a new product, a new product, which is a new product. In recent years, the number of leukemia patients has increased significantly, and many of them are related to long-term exposure to harmful substances. Text/Gao Xiang