Appendicitis Bleeding from the incision after surgery What happens to pus, what to do

Updated on healthy 2024-06-28
10 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-12

    It doesn't matter... I've had ... Go to the hospital and find a doctor...

    It's infected. It doesn't really matter. You may have to endure a little ...

    The hospital will cut your wound open with something... Take it easy. Not dangerous.

    I'm only 12 years old, that's it) and he disinfects you... You need to be hygienic. You can't walk around...

    You go and change the dressing every day. As long as your gauze is wet with haze. Just go for it...

    After changing it four or five times, you can go to the hospital to seal the needle... In 7 days to remove the stitches... It was successfully completed ...

    I'm at the end of June. Operate. I was also in the shadow that day...

    I'm removing the stitches now. The wound is healing well.

    Other than that. You see that there is not a threaded head on your wound. (Black.) The thread reflects the individual's constitution. I'll have to; (Just ask the doctor to help you remove the threads.) It doesn't hurt at all. )

    And also. You may liquefy fat...

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    Then you should find a doctor in time, postoperative wound inflammation is not a good thing, hurry to the hospital.

    Don't procrastinate.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    Incision infection, incision debridement by the surgeon, removal of visible thread knots and necrotic tissue, placement of drainage and insistence on dressing change, generally will heal, if it does not heal for a long time, sinus tract formation, it is necessary to pay attention to whether there is an intestinal fistula and surgery**.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    Postoperative infections are also relatively common, and it will be better if you go to the hospital to change dressings more often.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    The main reason for wound suppuration after surgery is inflammation and infection at the wound site, and once the inchement is infected, it should be drained in time and the drainage should be unobstructed. Completely remove necrotic tissue, leave no dead space, and remove foreign bodies in time so that the infected incision can heal quickly.

    If the wound appears in the abdominal sinus tract and the wound is suppurated in the sinus tract, first find out the direction and cause of the sinus tract, the incision can be enlarged, and the necrotic tissue and infected knots and foreign bodies can be completely removed, including the sinus tract, and unhealthy granulation tissue can be removed, and the sinus tract can be gradually healed, and sometimes sinus tract resection is required. **In the process, it is also necessary to apply antibiotic drugs to eliminate internal inflammation.

    If the postoperative wound is suppurated and does not heal due to intestinal fistula, the first thing to do is to make the drainage unobstructed, control the infection, eliminate the abscess cavity, and avoid the formation of a new fistula. Most heal spontaneously with palliative care**. Diagnosing intestinal fistula is not always easy, if the infected incision does not heal for more than three months, the possibility of intestinal fistula should be considered, and granulation pathological examination, barium swallow, barium enema or fistula angiography should be used to determine**, the extent of the lesion, the direction of the fistula, etc., in preparation for surgery**.

    Simple fistula excision needs to be complete and repaired right up to the fistula. Sometimes fistula removal alone is not very successful. or ileocecal tumors, fistula and intestinal segment resection and intestinal anastomosis are required.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    After appendicitis, if there is a little pus in the wound, one reason may be that the patient is fat and has liquefied fat after surgery;

    Another reason is that you have purulent appendicitis, and a small number of pus cells will also infect the wound during the operation, so during the healing process of the wound, the wound will have a rejection reaction to these pus cells and expel pus from the body.

    For the former case, no special treatment is generally required, while for the latter, it depends on the actual amount of pus discharged, and if it is more, it should also be treated in the hospital for anti-inflammatory**, so as to avoid the formation of sinus tracts at the wound.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Some are normal, some are caused by infection, but no matter which one it is, you need to change the wound dressing, ranging from 1 time a day to 2 times a day, depending on how much pus you have flowing, and then it is best to call the doctor to take a look, because I don't know the specific situation of your wound, it is right to ask the doctor to take a look, and then change the dressing more is generally not a big problem.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    Complications after appendix surgery are:1incision infection;

    2.Peritonitis, intra-abdominal abscess.

    3.Haemorrhage. 4.Fecal fistula.

    5.Appendiceal stubitis.

    6.Adhesive intestinal obstruction.

    So it's normal to have an infusion of the incision, and you don't have to worry about it.

    Recommendation: Continue to change the dressing regularly, the purpose of the dressing change is to drain the pus inside, and then the incision will heal naturally.

    Good luck soon**!!

  9. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Guidance:

    Hello, simple acute appendicitis is non-surgical**, most patients can**, but those with chronic inflammation or narrow lumen are easy to **, so once acute appendicitis is diagnosed, emergency surgery should still be performed to remove the appendrium of the lesion. Inflammation of the appendix develops more rapidly during pregnancy due to pelvic congestion, so surgery should also be performed promptly. If the diagnosis is unclear, if the patient has manifestations of local peritonitis or obvious systemic infection, laparotomy should also be performed to avoid delay**.

    If there are no signs of acute inflammation in the appendix during surgery, other acute lesions should be explored. If the patient has formed a peripheral abscess due to appendicitis, the appendix should be removed non-surgically** first, and the appendix should be removed after 3 months or half a year after the abscess is absorbed. 、、

  10. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    Analysis: Consider wound infection based on your medical history.

    Wound infection is often manifested as local redness, swelling, heat pain, and even pus.

    1. If the wound is clean, it can be debrided and sutured.

    2. Give antibiotics.

    3. Change the wound dressing on time.

    Suggestions:

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