Welcome to Pregnancy Guide
After Early Miscarriage Pregnancy Article
. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.
You may also listen to this article by using the following controls.
#229 miscarriage statistics
from: word count: 467The Shocking Truth About Miscarriage Statistics
The unfortunate reality of miscarriage statistics is that one in five pregnancies will result in a miscarriage. Most miscarriages occur within the first twelve weeks of a pregnancy but a miscarriage is defined as the loss of a pregnancy prior to twenty-four weeks gestation. Miscarriage statistics show that miscarriages are far more common than most people realize.
Some people miscarry so early in a pregnancy that they weren’t even aware of the pregnancy. Research in miscarriage statistics should that the most common cause of the spontaneous aborting (also known as a miscarriage) of a pregnancy is due to genetic or chromosomal problems in the developing embryo. Very often, there is no clear telltale reason for the miscarriage and there’s little that women can do to foresee it and nothing that a physician can do once the cervix has opened. When a woman starts vaginal bleeding in the first trimester, miscarriage statistics show that fifty per cent of the time, the pregnancy will end in miscarriage. Having recurrent miscarriage is when a pregnancy ends prior to twenty-four weeks three or more times consecutively. Miscarriage is said to be your body’s way of responding to an unviable pregnancy. This offers little comfort to someone who is grieving a loss that they very likely already became quite attached to. Miscarriages are a painful, although common occurrence. Not all vaginal bleeding ends in miscarriage so it’s important to take care of yourself while awaiting the outcome.
Many women wonder how soon after a miscarriage is safe for attempting to become pregnant again. Most doctors believe that women should wait one to two menstrual cycles before trying again to let the body heal. Some miscarriage statistics show that the body doesn’t always completely expel the pregnancy on its own. This is when a D&C must be performed by a doctor to clean out the uterus.
Miscarriage statistics show that about 15% of pregnancies end in miscarriage. Fortunately for most people, the risk of having a second consecutive miscarriage is fairly small and less than 20 %. If vaginal bleeding occurs after a viable fetus has been documented, the chance of miscarriage is increased to about 20 percent. Marriage statistics also report that if the woman’s pregnancy ended in miscarriage, the second has only a slightly elevated possibility of ending with the same outcome.
Maternal age is also a factor in miscarriage statistics, whereby a woman’s chance of miscarriage increases at age thirty-five and dramatically increases at age forty. While miscarriage is a painful and difficult experience, the commonality of this occurrence should give you some peace of mind in your potential ability to conceive successfully in the future. Take time to grieve and be well and talk to your doctor to ensure that you do not have underlying conditions for repeated miscarriage.
Warning: file(http://www.searchfeed.com/rd/feed/TextFeed.jsp?trackID=Q3835304521&pID=62408&cat=after+early+miscarriage+pregnancy&nl=5&page=1&excID=) [function.file]: failed to open stream: HTTP request failed! HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found
in /home/cwatchco/public_html/preparents/miscarriage/datas/searchfeed.php on line 8
After Early Miscarriage Pregnancy Specific links
After Early Miscarriage Pregnancy News
Coping after a miscarriage
Momaha's editor Josefina Loza says the loss of a baby — no matter how early in pregnancy — is real, and so is the grief.
Read more...Worcester could get new DNA test for Down syndrome
A simple blood test done on maternal serum early in the first trimester of pregnancy to determine if a baby has Down syndrome, or Trisomy 13 or Trisomy 18, more severe genetic syndromes, will likely be offered to mothers in Worcester County later this year.
Read more...Angelica Swartout’s infanticide confession discounted by expert witness
A University of San Francisco law professor known for his research on false confessions told jurors Thursday that Angelica Swartout was at elevated risk for falsely confessing to police that she murdered a newborn son on Oct. 18, 2010. That risk was heightened by Springfield police interrogation techniques before and …
Read more...Every expectant mother to get her own midwife before and after birth
Pregnant women will be given a 'named midwife' to focus on their care before and after they give birth, ministers will promise.
Read more...Disrupted Sleep Patterns Hinder Mice's Fertility, Study Finds
A strong body of evidence links daily wake-sleep cycles to feminine reproductive cycles . When scientists remove a female mouse’s suprachiasmatic nucleus —the pacemaker in her brain that regulates daily circadian rhythms—her estrous cycle ceases, and she becomes infertile.
Read more...Parker County man who raped, impregnated daughter sentenced to 40 years
Woman had a child, miscarriage and two abortions, prosecutors say.
Read more...Off the Clock: Disrupted Daily Rhythms Hinder Fertility in Mice
“My biological clock is ticking.” The phrase typically pops up in movies about middle-aged women who want to start a family before menopause makes it impossible. But a new study published May 23 in PLoS ONE indicates that another clock may also be important for females trying to conceive: the one that regulates our waking and sleeping cycles. [More]
Read more...









