Very occasionally the fertilised ovum starts dividing rapidly and instead of forming a placenta and baby it forms a hydatidiform mole. Many women miscarry this completely, but some go into the second trimester still carrying and have to have the tissue removed. See the accompanying link as to why it is extremely important that you have all the follow up tests.
yes because you digest the bebe
Yes you can. Pregnancy tests can come out positive weeks after a miscarriage. but you should still get checked by a doctor because you may have just been bleeding. you can't tell for sure if you had a miscarriage unless you see a doctor.
Well you have to speak wiht your doctor about that because if you are expierencing and ectopic pregnancy then, your fallopian tube might burst, so the doctor has to abort the pregnancy, and it would be like a regular miscarriage, heavy bleeding and cramping.
The cramping occurs because the uterus attempts to push out the pregnancy tissue.
no, and if you are bleeding during pregnancy u need to go see the doctor because u might have had a miscarriage
No, when having a miscarriage in the first trimester it's usually because the fetus would not make it through the pregnancy. It can be deformed for instance. Mother Nature takes care of it so to speak.
Since you've gotten pregnant once, chances are that it could happen again. But, if the first miscarriage was because it was a tubal pregnancy, then you have a greater chance that any subsequent pregnancies will be tubal as well.
If you had a miscarriage in the first trimester, which is most common, it's usually something wrong with the fetus and Mother Nature stop the pregnancy because it is not viable. 1/3 pregnancies end in miscarriage so it's very common. Just try again.
Normally all miscarriages come out the vaginal way but there is no way to detect a miscarriage afterwards. Everything is gone.
It means that there is still the presence of the pregnancy hormone (hCG). Home pregnancy tests give positive results when they detect the presence of hCG. It can take days to several weeks for a woman's hCG levels to return to baseline after a miscarriage; it all depends on how far along she was. Taking home pregnancy tests in the first few weeks after a miscarriage is not a reliable way to check for pregnancy because of all of the false negative results, due to the lingering pregnancy hormone in the woman's system.
Can not find anything that would indicate that they can cause a miscarriage. The safest ones to use during pregnancy is Loratadine or Chlorphenamine. If you can not take those your doctor might give you Cetirizine. Seems like you had a miscarriage because the zygote was not viable. Happens in about a third of all pregnancies.
yes, it happend to me.... i wish you the best of luck hun