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Doctors and nurses reveal “little” signs of health that you should never ignore, which is shocking

We recently wrote an article where doctors and nurses reveal signs of health that people should not ignore. In the comments, even more and more medical professionals share “small” health problems that are often overlooked but very serious. This is an eye-opening result:

1.“I am a laboratory scientist. Our lab recently passed away within 48 hours of admission to acute leukemia. She has not conducted annual examinations with her provider or blood work in nearly three years. And the “general discomfort” that makes her an emergency room, AKA, for another few months, has been uncomfortable in the past few months.

“And do the blood work at the same frequency. If she continues regular medical visits, the woman may have a chance.

– Anonymous, 39, Montana

Maskot/Getty Images

2.“Breast discharge. It could be due to post-natal fertility control, hormone changes or something more serious, such as breast cancer involving milk ducts or pituitary brain tumors.”

-Anonymous

3.“I’m a retired emergency room RN. Never ignore the blood in the urine.”

– Anonymous, 63, Canada

4.“The vascular surgeon here. Sudden attacks in the calf should not be ignored when you walk. Even if your calf suffers from chronic pain, the sudden increase in pain that lasts for hours that day should be medically intervened that day. Whether the clot is in the artery or vein, or to resolve it, the significant long-term effects are addressed immediately.”

– Anonymous, 59, Virginia

People on the road may feel uncomfortable holding their legs

Prostate Pavilion/Getty Images

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5.“Chest pain. It could be AFIB (Atrial fibrillation), or worse.”

– Anonymous, 37, Georgia

6.“I work in rehabilitation, support and rehabilitation work for orthopedic doctors. A huge wake-up call for my own health that their health is normal, successful people in their 40s to 60s who cannot do a push-up or sit down from the floor, chronic back pain, neck pain, obesity, obesity and falls. From childhood to past retirement ages.

“I’ve seen other smart and capable patients Severe and negatively affect their health and quality of life Pass inactive. ”

– Anonymous, 29 years old, California

7.“Parents, give your child a fever. Don’t take your child quickly because ‘we want you to see how sick he is.’ You don’t know how long medical services you’ve seen in our waiting room and then you’ll see all your ambulances too.

“PS: Urgent Care is not an ER. Many emergency care offices have long waits because people will have urgent problems because we are closest to you, or ‘I don’t want to wait there!!!”

-Anonymous

A man holding a thermometer, a child lying in bed, looking uncomfortable

Dusan Atlagic/Getty Images

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8.“Suddenly losing weight without trying. This is what happens to cancer patients.”

– Anonymous, 27, Illinois

9.“Heavy, irregular periods. You shouldn’t have miserable periods, and you can even predict that they are a kind of progress.”

– Anonymous, 42, Canada

10.“I am an internist. Never ignore diabetes. The consequences of uncontrolled diabetes include: retinopathy, nephropathy, neuropathy (both sensory and autonomy), diabetic ulcers, diabetic foot infection, peripheral vascular disease, limb disease, limb and cardiovascular disease.”

– noobedux’

A person uses a lancet to test blood sugar levels, with glucose table on the table

Athima Tongloom / Getty Images

11.“Don’t ignore uncontrolled chronic hypertension and hypercholesterolemia. Risks include stroke, myocardial infarction, chronic renal disease, mesenteric ischemia, peripheral vascular disease, aortic truncation and aortic aneurysms.”

– Noobedux

12.“In addition, obesity. Risks include: chronic inflammatory state, risk of venous thromboembolic, malignant risk, obesity syndrome and sleep apnea, and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.”

– Noobedux

at last…

13.“‘Freaky nails or stick nails. It’s not always normal. It’s congenital, and the family has it, or a systemic specific signal, such as OSA (obstructive sleep apnea) or pulmonary hypertension.”

– North Carolina 32-year-old anonymous person

Close-up of a person's hand showing nail biting and skin

Note: Some submissions have been edited for length and/or clarity.

Doctors, nurses and other medical professionals, people should never ignore some other “small” signs of health? Tell us in the comments, or if you wish to remain anonymous, you can use the following form.

There is also goodness: This woman is begging for the woman not to get married now, personally, I can’t agree more

Just as helpful: People are sharing their biggest “How come everyone doesn’t know this?” The fact, I’m honestly embarrassed, I never realized some of them

Also good: “I think it’s normal”: People share the diagnosis they received after others point out the symptoms

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