Joke Collection Website - Mood Talk - What does it feel like to be pressed on your stomach after caesarean section? Why not use it when you are in labor?

What does it feel like to be pressed on your stomach after caesarean section? Why not use it when you are in labor?

It is said that it is pressing the stomach, but it is actually pressing the bottom of the uterus. Because it is necessary to discharge intrauterine hematocele (lochia) in time after operation to promote uterine contraction. Generally, it is pressed within 6 hours after caesarean section, and the number of times varies from 2 to 4 times according to the situation of lochia discharged by the parturient. If the uterine contraction is not good or the lochia is not discharged well, the number of pressing should be increased according to the actual situation.

Because the body is still recovering after the operation, the pain is inevitable, but don't worry, the pain is not unbearable.

Finally, let's talk about the simple difference between caesarean section and natural delivery: caesarean section requires certain surgical indicators, and natural delivery is a common mode of production; Caesarean section gives birth to children quickly, but it takes some time to recover after delivery, including pressing the bottom of uterus, getting out of bed 24 hours after operation to promote lochia discharge and prevent abdominal adhesion. Natural childbirth is a long labor process, and there will be pains during childbirth, but it will recover quickly after childbirth.

Let's share the process of caesarean section first

He was admitted to the hospital on February 4, when the number of weeks was 38+3. I did a lot of tests on the day I entered the hospital, including hematuria, electrocardiogram, B-ultrasound and fetal heart monitoring. For the next three days, there was no infusion, and oxygen was taken for fetal heart surgery, but the lung was injected intensively. One * * is four stitches. This is a butt injection, which hurts, but for the better development of children.

On the morning of February 7, the nurse came to give me an indwelling needle, because my blood vessels were too thin and my wrist really hurt. I dare not look at it. I gritted my teeth and listened to my husband say that I was almost ready, so I saved the needle and gave me infusion, but I forgot what I lost. At 9 o'clock, someone came to pick me up in the ward and took just the right bag from my baby and me. At this time, I began to be afraid and kept muttering. It's fast. I said I can't control it. When I entered the operating room, I couldn't hear what my mother and my husband said to me at the door. I was so scared that I kept shaking when I was lying on the operating table My doctor kept talking to me to ease my mood, and then I left a indwelling needle. I was seriously anemic, so I prepared a blood bag. After a few minutes, the anesthesiologist turned and bowed, and she touched her waist.

After a while, my feet and calves began to numb, and soon the anesthesiologist asked me to lift my legs. She pricked me with a needle when I said I couldn't lift it. My ward doctor inserted a catheter for me and everything was ready. My attending doctor came and asked me questions about boys and girls. I said girls, and she said she would take the children out at 9: 36, because the old man said that girls accounted for 369, so she didn't know when to open the knife. Then the surgeon asked if the pediatrician had come. Time's up, I feel someone pressing on my stomach, and I can't breathe. 1-2 minutes. When the baby took it out, he felt very relaxed, especially in his stomach, and soon he heard crying, but I pushed the anesthetic to let me sleep. Later, when they said I didn't remember what to look after the baby with, I was confused.

The whole process takes about 40-50 minutes from entering the operating room to launching. My husband and my mother are waiting for me at the door. My husband spoke to me with a thick nasal voice. After three days, I asked him if he was scared to cry. He refused to admit it. Then I went back to the ward for various testing instruments and lost a lot of fluids. I don't know when the doctor came to see lochia, and then I pressed my stomach once. I wasn't anesthetized at that time, and I didn't feel very painful. I only pressed the sandbag once and left it behind for three days. I vented quickly, and I finished venting that night. I drank some porridge, which was very thin, but my head ached for almost three days.

On February 8, I was able to turn over, and the pain was ok. However, after the injection of uterine contraction, I felt more pain. I used analgesic pump to maximize the dosage. At night, I got a spanking needle to discharge lochia, and then I had daily disinfection.

On February 9th, a series of infusions were similar to those on the 8th. 400 ml of blood was transfused today. Anemia is too serious. At night, the catheter was pulled out. It's really painful for me to go down for the first time. I moved to the bathroom bit by bit to urinate, hunched over, urinated well, quickly, stung a little, and then got better and better. My husband ordered a moon meal in the hospital, which was very light and delicious.

Let's talk about postpartum recovery experience: I used to be very satisfied with my body, which can be described as slim. But after giving birth, fat accumulated on my waist, abdomen and arms, and my figure was bloated like a child who was pregnant for 3 months. My good friend joked with me and said, "Do you still have a baby in your belly?" At this time, not only can't I put on all my old clothes, but I feel tired when I walk! I felt very insecure and looked at my friends who could wear beautiful clothes. I really envy them!

Now my mother-in-law also says that thin people become beautiful. When I go out with my baby, many people say that I'm not as beautiful as I just gave birth. I feel super good every day.

Should I press my stomach when I have a caesarean section?

Want it. Under normal circumstances, there will be some necrotic decidual tissue in the body after giving birth, which will be slowly excreted. This thing is usually called lochia. In the view of natural mothers, it is enough to clean up lochia in time. What's wrong with that? However, it is extremely difficult to really do this, because natural delivery is very different from caesarean section. After the operation is completed, women who give birth naturally only need to wait for lochia to be excreted, and there is no need to press the stomach at all. However, if it is caesarean section, once the stomach is not pressed in a short time, the residual lochia will remain in the body, which will also have a very adverse impact on the later life of the parturient.

Therefore, it is very important to press the abdomen for the parturient after she returns to the ward. However, for women who underwent surgery not long ago, the pain may be stronger than when giving birth to a child, so it is really not easy for mothers who have caesarean section.

It is worth mentioning that nurses can avoid a lot of unnecessary troubles in the future, although it seems to hurt when pressing their stomachs. When the beautiful young nurse slowly walks into the ward, the new mothers still can't understand what it feels like to press their stomachs, and may even pretend to smile at the nurse easily. But then shouts came from the ward.

When the nurse appears in front of her again, the mothers will have some resistance at this time. "Please don't press your stomach again. It doesn't matter if you let the lochia stay in your body." But nurses will not be soft.

Generally speaking, nurses will press their stomachs for the first time about five to six hours after giving birth, and it is more appropriate to press them twice a day. If there are no special circumstances, the residual lochia can be excreted after continuous pressing for two or three days. However, it was this short 48 hours that made the pregnant woman who was pressed in her stomach seem to have experienced a century. It's hard for people who haven't had a caesarean section to understand this feeling.

However, everything cannot be generalized. All of the above are general situations. How many times do I need to press my stomach? Depending on the physical condition of the parturient, the doctor will give the most suitable plan according to the actual situation of the parturient.

How does caesarean section relieve abdominal pain?

If you have a stomachache after caesarean section, it may be that the wound has not healed, or it may be that the scar has proliferated after caesarean section. In both cases, you can have a stomachache, so you must go to the hospital in time to do some related tests. You should rest more and apply hot water to the wound.

After caesarean section, many people will not resume menstruation in time. If there is no stomach pain after operation, it is only a pain problem that has appeared in recent days. This phenomenon may be menstruation. If there is vaginal bleeding or slight bleeding, it may be menstruation.

Another possibility is that there is no good recovery after caesarean section, and there is inflammation in the wound or stomach. This phenomenon can also lead to abdominal pain. You should go to the hospital, tell the doctor about your actual situation, and let the doctor see the recovery of your uterus, so that you can treat your disease according to the actual situation and eat more digestible food.

You have to press it when you have a natural birth. It's been a week, and my stomach is still black and blue [covering my face].

Some people have to give birth naturally.

As an experienced person, first of all, I sincerely suggest that you must wear an analgesic pump after caesarean section. Don't ask why, just wear it; Secondly, when the nurse presses the abdomen, she should hold back the pain again. Don't make a hullabaloo about, or abdominal flatulence and wound pain will be fatal. Finally, if the nurse in your hospital presses the abdomen, that's fine. I asked my family to press it. My husband's pig suddenly poked several scars on my stomach with his fingertips (the pressing technique was wrong and my stomach was scratched by nails).

Whether it is caesarean section or natural delivery, it takes a lot of energy and physical strength. Pay more attention to rest after delivery and give the children to their families. Only when they recover well can they take care of the baby better and faster! Finally, I wish all expectant mothers a smooth delivery and healthy babies!

I also pressed the natural delivery.

It hurts. I feel like I didn't press the knife. My stomach hurts (? -﹏-? ), think about how I got through it at that time

I pressed it in the delivery room. The cervix is big. Breastfeeding can stimulate contractions, lochia is easy to discharge, so you don't have to press it when you return to the ward.

I have had a caesarean section and didn't give birth naturally, so let's talk about the feeling of being crushed by caesarean section.

Daughter 18, 1, 15, two months premature. Cut because of lack of oxygen.

I don't know how to press my stomach after the operation. Later, the nurse came in and said I had to press my stomach. I thought it didn't hurt. As a result, it was ... sad, and I had to be pressured. ...

Did I press it four or five times, or five or six times each time? ! I forgot specifically. Anyway, every time I see a nurse come in, I get the creeps. It really hurts.

It is estimated that the most painful thing about caesarean section is being crushed into the stomach ~

It's okay. It hurt once. The rest are bruises. Combined breathing can relieve pain. The point is to have painkillers to help. Come on, moms.