Re: Vaginal hematoma - update.

From: art fougner, md (evsono@pipeline.com)
Sun Aug 12 18:54:41 2007


Vagina plus trauma plus blood = target rich environment.

Art

At Sun, 12 Aug 2007, Raymond Stephen wrote: >
>How does any collection/haematoma become infected? Blood borne
>bacteria? Local invasion? Nearby loss of skin integrity? There
>wouldn't be a haematoma if there hadn't been some sort of trauma to the
>tissues.
>
>Steve
>
>________________________________
>
>________________________________
>From: ob-gyn-l@obgyn.net [mailto:ob-gyn-l@obgyn.net] On Behalf Of
>
>--
>________________________________
>Charlie Chambers
>________________________________
>Sent: Monday, 13 August 2007 7:07 AM
>To: Multiple recipients of list OB-GYN-L
>Subject: Re: Vaginal hematoma - update.
>
>Curious, in the case of the vaginal hematoma. Exactly, what is the
>mechanism by which they get infected? I can certainly understand some of
>the other rational for drainage, but cannot come up with how they would
>become infected given that the compartment should be isolated from any
>infectious source.
>
>On Aug 12, 2007, at 1:26 PM, Gerald P.Rodriguez wrote:
>
>CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE AND DISCLAIMER
>
>other purpose.
>

--
art fougner, md
"May The Wings of Liberty Never Lose a Feather." - Jack Burton




use when must restrict search to only the ob-gyn-l forum...
Enter search keywords:
Returns per screen: Require all keywords:

Return to  OB-GYN-L Mail a New Message to the Forum: ob-gyn-l@obgyn.net
Forum Administrator: geffrey.klein@obgyn.net
Report Technical Problems: webmaster@obgyn.net
Last Updated: Sun Nov 2 04:59:44 2008

The American Medical Association is no longer designating CME hours for AMA Category II CME credit. However, physicians themselves may self designate learning activities as Category II CME credit hours if they feel it is of sufficient educational merit and meets the formal definitions of continuing medical education. OBGYN.net believes these interaction in this forum meets these criteria. For further information see the AMA web site.