When a woman, who is pregnant, begins to flow she
should at once go to bed and keep perfectly quiet and send for a physician. A
miscarriage is a treacherous condition and is so regarded by all medical men.
It may not amount to much or it may, on the other hand, develop into a serious
situation. The immediate danger is from hemorrhage; the ultimate or remote
danger is sepsis or blood poisoning. The condition is one that can only be
taken in charge by a qualified physician in whose hands we can safely leave the
conduct of the case.
As a general rule it is quite safe to assert that
a woman will not bleed enough at the beginning of a miscarriage to do any
permanent harm. Consequently there is no occasion for unnecessary alarm. She
must, however, as stated above, heed the warning and go to bed, keep perfectly
quiet and send for a physician.
If she fails to follow this advice it is quite
possible that she may have a hemorrhage during the course of the miscarriage of
a sufficiently serious character to endanger her life or from the effects of
which she may suffer for the remainder of her life.
There is practically no danger during the course
of or after a "complete" miscarriage. The danger which may ensue from
an "incomplete" miscarriage is hemorrhage and a form of poisoning
caused by the absorption into the system of putrifying products of the part of
the dead embryo left in the womb.
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