Subsequent hæmorrhage rarely occurs, but obliteration of the canal of the urethra is to be dreaded.
Epstein to arrest hæmorrhage are those ordinarily used in hæmorrhagic cases, such as will be given presently.
The bleeding is treated by the application of herbs and hot poultices; hæmorrhage kills half the victims, and at times brings the perpetrators of the vile proceeding within the clutches of the law.
The assistant continues the compression till hæmorrhage ceases, adding fresh supplies of the astringent powders; a bandage is added and the patient left to himself.
The operator generally visits the infant in the afternoon of the operation, and carefully inspects the dressings, to see that no hæmorrhage has supervened.
The hæmorrhage from the dental artery was arrested by the actual cautery.
The hæmorrhage was immediately arrested, and soon after reaction ensued.
A prolapsus of the uterus, which gradually became inverted, followed, attended with frequent hæmorrhage and discharge, by which she was almost worn to the grave.
The hæmorrhage was restrained by a sponge firmly lodged at the bottom of the wound, covered by compresses of lint, and the whole secured by a double-headed roller.
Case of hæmorrhage from the nose cured by cold immersion.
An hæmorrhage from the nose or from the lungs is sometimes a crisis of inflammatory diseases, as of the hepatitis and gout, and generally ceases spontaneously, when the vessels are considerably emptied.
He was then directed to bathe in a cold spring up to the middle of his body only, the upper part being covered, and the hæmorrhage diminished at the first, and ceased at the second immersion.
Sometimes the hæmorrhage recurs by daily periods accompanying the hot fits of fever, and ceasing in the cold fits, or in the intermissions; this is to be cured by removing the febrile paroxysms, which will be treated of in their place.
Case of hæmorrhage from the kidney cured by cold bathing.
At last, however, the hæmorrhage stopped, under the state of syncope.
When the tube bursts, the hæmorrhage may not be so profuse as to induce death; and the woman, recovering from the shock, does not manifest such grave symptoms as to demand surgical aid.
This method allows the surgeon to operate deliberately, generally with the hæmorrhage under easy control, the field of operation well illuminated, and no anxiety in regard to the anæsthetic.
This will not only arrest the hæmorrhage and keep the inner part of the wound dry, but at the same time will keep the skin flaps in position.
There are few accidents which test the skill, nerve, and resource of a surgeon more than cœliotomy for a suspected intraperitoneal hæmorrhage from a gravid tube, and few operations are attended with such brilliant results.
The laryngotomy tube can be removed as soon as the patient recovers consciousness and all hæmorrhage has ceased.
Hæmorrhage may require the plug being left in situ for a few minutes, so as to get a clear view of the depths of the nose.
The operation is most suitable for uteri containing many small fibroids causing severe hæmorrhage which cannot be controlled by more palliative measures.
Myles’s cases profuse hæmorrhage occurred on the ninth day and required ligature of the external carotid.
If diagnosed sufficiently early, an attempt may be made to remove the tumour, but often the operation has to be abandoned, either on account of the hæmorrhage which attends it, or because of the extent of the disease.
The sudden onset of deafness may be due to impaction of wax in the external meatus or to hæmorrhage or effusion into the labyrinth.
Hæmorrhage into the nerve sheath or contusion of the nerve may cause a transitory loss of smell.
Nasal hæmorrhage usually takes place from one or more dilated capillaries situated at the anterior inferior part of the septum close to the vestibule, and in such cases the bleeding point is readily detected.
If profuse hæmorrhage occurs it may be necessary to ligate the main artery lower in the neck.
The condition differs from compression due to middle meningeal hæmorrhage in that it is less severe and is not steadily progressive.
But let's have a look at you, and see if we can stop the hæmorrhage before we pick you up.
The bleeding vessel was deep down and very difficult to find, and the hæmorrhage became so severe after the stimulant that for a long time his life was despaired of from extreme exhaustion due to loss of blood.
It is impossible to give any exact directions for the incisions which must be planned for individual cases, with two chief aims, to avoid hæmorrhage as far as possible, and to leave abundance of skin.
This will at once stop the hæmorrhage till the vessel can be secured.
The hæmorrhage during any attempt to remove it is generally of the most severe character, but ceases immediately on its complete detachment.
This operation is in the great majority of cases performed for femoral aneurism, and naturally secondary hæmorrhage is a too frequent result.
The author has met with one case in a boy of eleven, in whom a very severe hæmorrhage was not to be explained.
There is certainly less risk of secondary hæmorrhage if a portion be removed, than when a flaccid empty bag is left.
The proper management of the adhesions and the thorough prevention of all hæmorrhage from them; (2.
From its proximity to the trunk, hæmorrhage is one of the chief dangers to be apprehended during this operation, especially from the axillary artery.
To arrest hæmorrhage from a wound of the artery itself, no special directions are required, except to enlarge the wound, and secure the vessel above and below the bleeding point.
In men of mature age the arteries have at times been unable to resist the high blood-pressure, and cerebral hæmorrhage with paralysis has occurred.
If the hæmorrhage is only slight, the wound should be merely dabbed gently with the antiseptic wool until it has stayed.
Thus, with the hæmorrhage we get ecchymosis, and consequent red staining of the surrounding structures.
The clot remaining from the hæmorrhage after the operation was removed, the wound was irrigated with a hot solution of sublimate, and then dusted with iodoform and covered with a dressing of iodoform gauze and absorbent wool.
The removal of diseased horn should always commence at the most dependent part of the foot, so that any hæmorrhage produced may be below the parts still to be operated on, a matter of considerable moment for effective treatment.
When hæmorrhage has accompanied the operation, this dressing should be removed on the following day, the wound dressed, and the pledgets of tow and the bandage renewed.
The same agents are likewise contra-indicated when hæmorrhage is still present.
Those who use it for this purpose are able to say this in its favour: it brings about the opening of the abscess without the unsightly hæmorrhage attending the use of the knife, and at the same time just as effectually empties it.
A larger vessel may be taken up with the artery forceps and ligatured, or the hæmorrhage stopped by torsion.
Hæmorrhage is afterwards arrested, and a dressing of perchloride of mercury (a solution, 1/2 per cent.
When the hæmorrhage has sufficiently ceased, an ordinary flat firing-iron should be passed over the whole of the cut surface, and an effectual eschar formed.
Lameness increases, serous fluid is effused between the horn and sensitive part, or even hæmorrhage may take place.
The hæmorrhage which ensues is principally venous, and is easily controlled by the artery forceps.
The blood, filling the trachea, suspended respiration, and of course the impelling power of the blood was suspended, and the hæmorrhage ceased.
It is usually followed by hæmorrhage into the anterior chamber, and there may be separation of the iris from its ciliary border.
Fatal hæmorrhage may result from penetrating wounds or from rupture due to kicks, blows, crushes, especially if the spleen be enlarged.
Wounds to the vulva are dangerous, owing to hæmorrhage from the large plexus of veins without valves.
Hæmorrhage into the pons may give rise to contracted pupils.
They cause little hæmorrhage externally, but death may be due to internal hæmorrhage.
A positive opinion is justified when such injuries are found on the body as could not have been inflicted during birth, and are attended with such hæmorrhage as could only have occurred while the blood was circulating.
It was a boot lace they were fixing to stop the hæmorrhage (bootlaces are used for everything in France).
The pain was getting worse again, and from what the sister said I gathered something down there had begun to hæmorrhage once more.
It is hæmorrhage from the lungs," she said, "which is common among poitrinaires.
In due course the doctor came and announced that the hæmorrhage had ceased, and that the patient was in no imminent danger.
In such cases traces of extra- or intra-dural hæmorrhage sometimes still persisted.
Unfortunately no new facts can be furnished on this point, although a few cases of rapid death from primary hæmorrhage will be found recounted under the heading of visceral injuries.
The common carotid artery was tied for secondary hæmorrhage (Mr. Jameson) some three weeks later.
It will suffice here to say that hæmorrhage was rarely of a dangerous nature so far as life was concerned, unless the large visceral vessels or those in the walls of serous cavities were concerned, when death was often rapid.
Again, primary amputation for small-calibre bullet wounds, except when complicated by severe injury to the bones, was so rare as to render more than doubtful the frequent occurrence of severe primary hæmorrhage on the field.
In the case of bone fragment punctures, secondary hæmorrhage is a more likely indication for amputation than primary.
Given favourable conditions, it might be treated locally by ligature at the time, while if hæmorrhage is not proceeding, developments should be awaited before proceeding to amputation.
A considerable hæmorrhage also occurred on the tenth day.
Thus in the case referred to both dura and brain were wounded, and continuing hæmorrhage led to the development of progressive paralysis, relieved only by operation.
The second feature of interest is the amount of hæmorrhage into the subcutaneous tissue.
Mills-Roberts described to me one fatal case under his care in the Welsh Hospital in which extra-dural hæmorrhage was so abundant as, in his opinion, to have taken a prominent part in the production of the paralytic symptoms.
Then all of a sudden a hæmorrhage supervened, and the young wife died, and the young husband was stricken with trouble and grief.
A hæmorrhage in typhoid is not necessarily fatal, but it often proves so.
My baby that I lost died from hæmorrhage when he was eight days old; then the second, when she was four months old, died from an injury to the spine, both done at birth.
The constant repetition of such hæmorrhage may lead to uterine congestions, or even to amenorrhea, i.
If the menstrual crisis finds the uterine blood-vessels already deprived of tonicity through nervous exhaustion or other cause, hæmorrhage is as likely to occur as if that tonicity were only exhausted at the epoch of menstruation.
A young girl of sixteen consulted me on account of menstrual hæmorrhage so excessive as to induce complete exhaustion, bordering upon syncope.
Nervous excitement during the inter-menstrual period, is quite as likely to be followed by pain or excessive hæmorrhage at the next menstruation, as if it had been sustained at the critical epoch itself.
Infection of clean wounds which are made by a sharp cutting instrument and from which there is abundant hæmorrhage with sealing of the edges of the wound by clotted blood, rarely happens.
This, the natural means of stopping bleeding from small wounds, being in abeyance, fatal hæmorrhage may result from pulling a tooth or from an insignificant wound.
There is in this a marked tendency to hæmorrhage which depends upon an alteration in the character of the blood which prevents clotting.
They often contain dead cells or cell fragments, and when hæmorrhage takes place in a tissue they enclose and remove the granules of blood pigment which result.
The blood fluid lost in a hæmorrhage is quickly restored by a withdrawal of the fluid from the tissues into the blood, but the cells lost are restored by new formation of cells in the blood-forming organs.
The prognosis therefore in cases of secondary hæmorrhage can never be other than uncertain and unfavourable; the danger from loss of blood per se is less when the artery concerned is amenable to control by surgical measures.
As a result of contusion, especially in bleeders, hæmorrhage may occur into the cavity of a bursa and give rise to a bursal hæmatoma.
The dressings and bandage are then applied, with the limb in the attitude that will diminish the force of the stream through the main artery, for example, flexion at the elbow in hæmorrhage from the deep palmar arch.
The treatment of a recent hæmorrhage consists in securing absolute rest and applying elastic compression.
Hæmorrhage is easily controlled by digital pressure, and the use of a tourniquet should be dispensed with, as the constriction of the limb is liable to interfere with the vitality of the flaps.
Varicose veins in immediate relation to the base of a large chronic ulcer usually become thrombosed, and in time are reduced to fibrous cords, and therefore in such cases hæmorrhage is not a common complication.
As a rule the ordinary means of arresting hæmorrhage are of little avail.
The risk in such cases is secondary hæmorrhage resulting from pyogenic infection.
If the pulsation returns within a week of the injury, the presumption is that the occlusion was due to pressure from without--for example, by hæmorrhage into the sheath or the pressure of a fragment of bone.
The dissection may be attended with troublesome hæmorrhage from the numerous veins that converge towards the femoral trunk.
March 1795, which occasioned him to sneeze much, during which a copious hæmorrhage from the lungs occurred, and he spit up at the same time half a pint of very fetid matter, and recovered.
This is the general cause of hæmorrhage from the kidney; and of obtuse pain in it on exercise; or of acute pain, when the stone advances into the ureter.
Hæmorrhage from the kidnies, when attended with no pain, is owing to defect of venous absorption in the kidney.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "morrhage" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.