Bleeding: Causes, Symptoms, and How to Identify It


Bleeding: Causes, Symptoms, and How to Identify It

Bleeding: Causes, Symptoms, and How to Identify It

Bleeding is the condition of blood flowing out of blood vessels, which can occur anywhere in the body.

1. Bleeding Circumstances:

  • Trauma or not: Bleeding due to trauma is usually obvious, associated with wounds.
  • Vomiting blood, black stool: Gastrointestinal bleeding.
  • Menorrhagia, hematuria, nosebleeds and bleeding gums: Mucosal bleeding.

2. Medical History:

  • Personal history:
  • Any trauma?
  • Menorrhagia or menorrhagia?
  • Use of anticoagulants?
  • Liver and biliary diseases?
  • Systemic diseases?
  • Family history:
  • Hemophilia?
  • Difficult to stop bleeding?

3. Clinical Examination:

  • Bleeding under the skin, mucous membranes:
  • Location: Skin and mucosal areas.
  • Morphology: Size, shape, color.
  • Quantity: Scattered or concentrated.
  • Progression: Color over time.
  • Skin tension test: Checking the strength of the blood vessels.
  • Internal bleeding:
  • Brain hemorrhage, meningeal hemorrhage: Neurological signs.
  • Liver, lung hemorrhage: X-ray, ultrasound.
  • Gastrointestinal bleeding: Vomiting blood, black stools.
  • Urinary system: Hematuria.

4. Paraclinal Examination:

  • Tourniquet test: Assess vascular strength.
  • Platelet count: Check the number and quality of platelets.
  • Coagulation factor test: Check the activity of intrinsic and extrinsic coagulation factors.

5. Classification of Bleeding:

  • Platelet bleeding:
  • Spontaneous bleeding, polymorphic, small in size, multi-age.
  • Accompanied by mucosal bleeding, reduced platelet count or quality.
  • Coagulation factor bleeding:
  • Bleeding after trauma, localized, in patches.
  • Progression depends on the location of the lesion, less mucosal bleeding.
  • Bleeding due to vascular damage:
  • Complex management, excluding platelet and coagulation factor bleeding.
  • Systemic vascular damage: Due to immune complexes (e.g., Henoch-Schönlein purpura: Purpura, abdominal pain, arthritis).
  • Similar to thrombocytopenic bleeding, but platelet count is normal, tourniquet test is positive.

Note: This article is for informational purposes only and should not replace the advice of a doctor. If you suspect that you or someone you know is bleeding, see a doctor for diagnosis and timely treatment.



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