How to determine cervical cancer bleeding

  Cervical cancer is the most common malignant tumor of the female reproductive tract. Its typical symptoms are vaginal bleeding and vaginal discharge, and in the middle and late stages, it manifests as irregular vaginal bleeding, or heavy bleeding when the tumor erodes the interstitial blood vessels. Therefore, if patients present with contact vaginal bleeding, unexplained bleeding after sexual intercourse or examination, consider that it may be cervical cancer bleeding. In addition, if young patients have prolonged periods or increased menstrual volume, or elderly patients have sudden vaginal bleeding after menopause, it may also be cervical cancer bleeding, and usually colposcopic biopsy pathology can confirm the diagnosis.  Treatment of cervical cancer bleeding When bleeding occurs in cervical cancer, the following measures should be taken: 1.Emergency treatment: in emergency, local gauze can be filled in the vagina to stop bleeding and go to hospital for treatment as soon as possible; 2.Surgical treatment: according to the stage, complete hysterectomy is performed; for cervical cancer with sub extensive, complete hysterectomy plus lymph node dissection is performed; 3.Radiotherapy or chemotherapy: if the condition is late and surgery cannot be performed, radiotherapy can also stop bleeding. can stop the bleeding.  Cervical cancer post-operative precautions are as follows: 1. Regular check-ups: patients need to be examined every 2-3 months within 2 years after surgery, 4-6 months within 2-5 years after surgery, and once a year after 5 years after surgery; 2. Close observation of daily symptoms: if abnormalities such as vaginal bleeding, abdominal distension, abdominal pain, and difficulty in defecation occur, patients should go to the hospital promptly; 3. Complications: exercise appropriately and elevate the lower limbs to avoid lower limb swelling and thrombotic disorders.