MODERN ASPECTS OF REHABILITATION OF PATIENTS WITH POSTOPERATIVE CESAREAN SECTION SCAR
Abstract
The number of caesarean sections around the world is increasing every year. This is influenced by the rapid development of modern medical science, the improvement of surgical techniques, the emergence of new suture materials and broad-spectrum antibiotics, pain relief, and the change in society's attitude to childbirth. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), caesarean section (CS) is the most widely used operative method of childbirth today. Determining the role of CS practice in the search for ways to reduce perinatal and maternal morbidity and mortality is essential. In some cases, this method of delivery is the only way to reduce maternal mortality: premature separation of the normally located placenta and the appearance of signs of its partial separation, severe hypertensive conditions, including a severe degree of preeclampsia and eclampsia, somatic complications that lead to complications in the mother's natural delivery pathologies.