Chronic pelvic inflammatory disease is a condition of pelvic inflammatory disease, which has a serious impact on women. After illness, active treatment should be taken, and attention should be paid to cooking in daily life.
Patients with chronic discitis can also have sex
Osteoarthritis is in an acute stage of attack and must not be in the same room. However, the condition is well controlled and there is no discomfort such as fever and pain. Sexual activity can be arranged appropriately.
Precautions for Chronic Discitis in Sexual Life
1. How to ensure that the condition is under good control? Firstly, it is important to pay attention to whether recent symptoms such as fever, lower abdominal and lumbosacral pain are obvious, mild or almost disappear, and the condition is stable. Secondly, it is important to observe whether the vaginal discharge is normal, white or transparent, odorless, moderate in volume, yellow or green, and those with abnormal odors should not have sex. In addition, during vaginal tamponade, one cannot be in the same room. Otherwise, it will affect the efficacy.
2. Love should not be too intense: Even if the condition improves, it does not mean recovery. Patients with chronic pelvic inflammatory disease should not engage in too intense love during their illness. Appropriate strength, gentle movements, sufficient foreplay, and appropriate lateral and backward postures.
3. Jackets are indispensable, and cleaning work must be carried out to ensure that there is still a possibility of inflammation if the condition is not cured. It is best for men to use condoms during sexual activity. Before and after cohabitation, both parties should clean their genitals, and those with excessive foreskin in males should be cleaned to avoid cross infection.
Hazards of chronic pelvic inflammatory disease
1. The patient experiences lower abdominal pain, accompanied by fever and chills during the onset of the disease. Accompanied by peritonitis, nausea, vomiting, bloating, and diarrhea are all symptoms of chronic pelvic inflammatory disease.
2. When acute inflammation transforms into chronic inflammation, scar adhesions and pelvic congestion form, causing lower abdominal distension, pain, and lumbosacral pain in patients. This symptom generally occurs after fatigue, sexual intercourse, and before and after menstruation.
3. Systemic symptoms are often not obvious, and sometimes low fever and fatigue may occur. If the course of the disease is long, some patients may experience symptoms of neurasthenia, such as low energy, overall discomfort, insomnia, etc. When patients have poor resistance, they are prone to acute or subacute attacks.
4. If there is abscess formation, there may be symptoms of bladder irritation, rectal irritation, and other lower abdominal masses, as well as local compression stimulation. The patient presents with acute symptoms, high body temperature, fast heart rate, abdominal distension, tension in the lower abdominal muscles, tenderness, and rebound pain.