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Causes of Pregnancy Loss or Miscarriage

April 1, 2020 by user Leave a Comment

The true cause of 25-60% of pregnancy losses is unknown. Where it is known the causes could vary from medical conditions affecting the baby itself to those affecting the mother.

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Most pregnancy losses within the first trimester are due to genetic disorders in the baby which are not compatible with life.

Thereafter, structural or functional abnormalities with the body of the mother’s womb or placenta or cervix, pre-existing medical conditions in the mother such as sickle cell disease, poorly controlled diabetes or hypertension, pre-eclampsia and thyroid disease, hormonal imbalances, incompatibilities with the mother and baby’s blood group (eg. Rhesus incompatibilities), immune diseases such as antiphospholipid syndrome, infections and trauma are common causes of stillbirth. Some of these conditions may threaten the ability of the mother’s body to sustain the pregnancy to its completion d

The true cause of 25-60% of pregnancy losses is unknown. Where it is known the causes could vary from medical conditions affecting the baby itself to those affecting the mother.

Most pregnancy losses within the first trimester are due to genetic disorders in the baby which are not compatible with life.

Thereafter, structural or functional abnormalities with the body of the mother’s womb or placenta or cervix, pre-existing medical conditions in the mother such as sickle cell disease, poorly controlled diabetes or hypertension, pre-eclampsia and thyroid disease, hormonal imbalances, incompatibilities with the mother and baby’s blood group (eg. Rhesus incompatibilities), immune diseases such as antiphospholipid syndrome, infections and trauma are common causes of stillbirth. Some of these conditions may threaten the ability of the mother’s body to sustain the pregnancy to its completion directly or cause abnormalities in the unborn baby that may not be compatible with its survival.

Thereafter, structural or functional abnormalities with the body of the mother’s womb or placenta or cervix, pre-existing medical conditions in the mother such as sickle cell disease, poorly controlled diabetes or hypertension, pre-eclampsia and thyroid disease, hormonal imbalances, incompatibilities with the mother and baby’s blood group (eg. Rhesus incompatibilities), immune diseases such as antiphospholipid syndrome, infections and trauma are common causes of stillbirth. Some of these conditions may threaten the ability of the mother’s body to sustain the pregnancy to its completion.

The essence of exploring the causes of pregnancy loss with your health provider where possible is to set in motion a plan of action to permanently correct any abnormality, manage any chronic condition proactively against the next time the mother conceives so as to forestall a repeat pregnancy loss.

With the guilt that follows miscarriages, some individuals believe that sexual intercourse, strenuous exercise or work can lead to miscarriages. There is no known evidence to support this notion.

What do you Feel when it Occurs?

Sometimes a pregnancy loss may be silent ie. the mother may not observe any obvious signs coming to the knowledge of what has occurred during a routine check or after a missed period.

common symptoms include bleeding of various degrees, passage of the fetus or bits of tissue from your vagina, abdominal cramps of various degrees, fever, lower back pain and loss of previously felt symptoms of pregnancy such as breast fullness, nausea. Once a total or imminent pregnancy loss is confirmed, your health care provider will need to ensure that your womb is completely empty through a series of tests which would include an ultra sound scan as well as give you medication and/or perform a surgical procedure on you.


Filed Under: Child Birth, Pregnancy Tagged With: Miscarriage, miscarriage in Nigeria, pregnancy, pregnancy loss

MISCARRIAGE or PREGNANCY LOSS in Nigeria

February 19, 2020 by user Leave a Comment

“I felt lost and alone and I felt like I failed because I didn’t know how common miscarriages were because we don’t talk about them.”

“It turns out that even two committed go-getters with a deep love and robust work ethic can’t will themselves into being pregnant.” Michelle Obama in her autobiography titled “Becoming”

I particularly love these quotes from America’s former first lady because for someone idolised by women all over the world it was an honest admission to a devastating but very common issue that affects women of reproductive age the world over; pregnancy loss. It was almost permission for women to acknowledge as valid their feelings of loss, inadequacy, guilt and confusion at what society perceives as a basic ability of every woman – conceiving and carrying a pregnancy to it’s successful completion.

Experiencing a miscarriage personally opened my eyes to the prospect of it happening to anybody. Speaking about it years after with women I knew exposed me to how close to home it could come … relatives and friends had experienced it and never talked about it openly because it’s not something we do openly in our society.

What is Pregnancy Loss or a Miscarriage?

Pregnancy loss could be described as the spontaneous termination of a pregnancy. If the demise of the baby occurs within the first 3 months to 20 weeks of life in the womb (or when it would have been considered as viable) it is termed an abortion or miscarriage whereas any loss from 20 weeks and above is considered a stillbirth. 80 % of all pregnancy losses occur within the first 3 months of pregnancy and 15-25 % of recognised pregnancies will end in miscarriage


Filed Under: Conception Tagged With: Miscarriage, pregnancy loss, Pregnant

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