Symptoms and treatment of endometritis

  Endometritis is a common female disease that harms many female patients, and how to treat chronic endometritis has become a major concern. Women can well avoid endometriosis harm infertility as long as they treat endometriosis in time. So, what are the symptoms of endometritis? How is endometritis treated?  I. Symptoms of endometritis 1. pain in the pelvic region: painful lower abdominal cramps and lumbosacral aches during the intermenstrual period.  2. Increased leucorrhea: due to increased secretion of endometrial glands. It is usually thin and watery, light yellow, sometimes bloody leucorrhea. The endometritis of old age is purulent leucorrhea, and often contains a small amount of blood. When the uterus accumulates pus, the secretion is purulent with odor.  3, excessive menstruation: regular periods but the volume of menstrual blood multiplies and the bleeding period is significantly prolonged. Irregular bleeding is less common.  4. Dysmenorrhea: Mostly seen in unproductive women, but severe dysmenorrhea is rare, probably due to excessive thickening of the endometrium, which prevents normal tissue degeneration and necrosis and stimulates excessive spasmodic contraction of the uterus.  The endometritis treatment 1, drug treatment Aged endometritis, can be applied hexestrol oral once a day for 1 to 2 weeks, and choose the appropriate antibiotic treatment for 5 to 7 days. At the same time, treatment is carried out for geriatric vaginitis.  2. Physiotherapy Physiotherapy is an option for moderate and severe patients when medication is not effective. However, physiotherapy can cause damage to the body and has great side effects and can easily lead to insensitivity of the nerves in the vaginal wall, no pleasure in sexual life and can easily lead to infertility. Therefore, this treatment should not be used for infertile women.  3.Surgical treatment Severe patients can choose whether to use cervical conization or total hysterectomy if both medication and physical therapy are ineffective, and surgical treatment is generally not recommended.  (1) Those with complications of pus accumulation in the uterine cavity should immediately dilate the cervical canal and drain the pus. After surgery, a rubber drain is placed in the cervical canal until there is no pus flow, and the above-mentioned medications are applied at the same time. In order to exclude cancer, the cervical canal and uterine cavity can be gently scraped after drainage of pus, and the tissue taken can be sent for pathological examination.  (2) If the diagnosis is confirmed as cancer, the patient should be treated as cancer. The pus should be sent to bacterial culture and drug sensitivity for reference of antibiotics selection.  (3) Uterine cavity irrigation is feasible for non-cancerous pus accumulation.