Posts Tagged ‘pregnant woman’

What If You Don’t Make It To The Hospital?

I think every pregnant woman thinks about the possibility of going through an emergency birth – having the baby before she arrives at the hospital, or before her doctor arrives at her house if she is having a home birth. Images of women giving birth in taxi cabs come to mind, or, if you’ve ever seen the show “I Didn’t Know I Was Pregnant,” images of women giving birth in their bathtubs. It sounds so scary, then again, why should it be? I often wonder why something so common and so natural is so frightening and mysterious to most of us. Shouldn’t delivering a baby be one of those things that every person knows how to do? They should add it to high school curriculum. It’s certainly more useful than memorizing ancient poetry, right? Every person should be able to balance a checkbook, drive a car, and deliver a baby.

If a woman is healthy and her baby is healthy, there is not a whole lot you need to do to intervene. If labor is so fast that you cannot make it to the hospital, chances are things are going well and you have nothing to worry about. The important thing to remember is to remain calm. If you are the mother and you are by yourself, remember to breathe and try to push very lightly or pant. Your body will do most of the work and this will decrease your chances of tearing. As the baby crowns, support the head to keep it from popping out. Do not pull on the baby, simply support the head and once it emerges, gently stroke your finger down the baby’s nose to push out any mucus. If the bag of waters is intact, break it and wipe the baby’s face with a clean towel. Check to see if the cord is wrapped around the neck. If it is, gently pull it up and over the baby’s head. As the baby is born, place her on mama’s stomach (that might be your stomach), skin-to-skin, and cover her with blankets. Keep baby’s head a little lower than her body to help with drainage. If you have a suction bulb, you can use that to suck fluid from the baby’s mouth and nose. Don’t tug on the umbilical cord. Wait for the placenta to be born. Once the placenta comes out, place it next to the baby and wait for help to arrive. You do not need to cut the cord.

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How to Include Your (Soon-to-be-Born) Baby at Christmas

There are lots of fun ways to include your soon-to-be born baby at Christmas. Who cares if they don’t know what is going on? For the mother-to-be, this “first” Christmas is just as special as all the Christmases to come.

Christmas can almost begin to feel like a baby shower for a pregnant woman. Family members may have gifts for the new baby, such as clothes or toys, and will enjoy watching the new mother open them “for the baby.” Hanging a stocking for the expected baby is a cute way to give small gifts like teething rings, pacifiers or baby socks.

Another way to include the soon-to-be-arriving family member is to include him or her in the Christmas card. Include a copy of the most recent ultrasound along with the family photo or sign the card from the family “and baby.” Friends and family will be tickled when they see the ultrasound or signature. If you send an annual Christmas letter, you can include details about your pregnancy when sharing each family member’s news.

Add a special ornament to your collection commemorating your pregnancy. You can find a keepsake ornament in the store or create one yourself! Not sure what to do? Make a cinnamon ornament in the shape of a baby foot and imprint the date. Mix equal parts cinnamon and apple sauce to create a dough, roll between two sheets of wax paper, cut with cookie cutters or a knife and add a hole with the end of a straw. Allow to air-dry for 24 hours and then string a ribbon through the hole to hang on the tree.

If you enjoy journaling, take a moment to write a letter to your baby about your family’s excitement to welcome him or her. Include current Christmas traditions and family anecdotes. It can be a wonderful keepsake for your child when they are older.

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it’s a baby thing: the importance of fluids during pregnancy

We all know that a pregnant woman is supposed to drink more water than the average non-pregnant person, right? Like 10 glasses instead of 8 or something like that. So, probably a 6oz cup of 1/2 caf coffee and a couple sips of Coca Cola is not enough for about 8 hours of the day. Nope. Not even close. Know why? I do!

Because you’ll pass out in front of all of your co-workers!

Whoops! I sort of did that yesterday. I ate two pop-tarts for breakfast. Not two packages – just two that come in one foil package. And I had a cup of 1/2 caffeine coffee. It was like my 4th cup since finding out I’m pregnant. I don’t drink a lot of coffee. Then I had a few animal crackers before lunch. For lunch I had half of my Victory Garden Soup. I was full and not feeling the best so I couldn’t finish it. It was still a pretty good sized portion though, I thought. Then I headed over to our West office for a meeting with a new agent. I was very thirsty (who woulda thunk, considering I’ve had approximately nothing to drink at this point in the day) so I grabbed one of the Coca Cola’s left over from Labor Day vacation (yes they’re still in my car!) and had a few sips.

I finished my meeting just fine and walked around the building to see if anyone else had questions. I stopped to talk to Brianna and we were talking about pregnancy and such. She recently lost her twins at about 18 weeks. We started talking about morning sickness and I started to feel a little flush. I figured we’d wrap up the conversation and I’d go get a drink but I didn’t make it that far. All of a sudden I was hot and dizzy and said that I was a little dizzy.

Then I woke up on the floor with my head smashed against the cubicle behind me. Another co-worker was already on the phone with 911. At that point I was somewhat awake but I couldn’t keep my eyes open. The paramedics got there within a few minutes and took vitals. I had a high pulse and normal BP. They stood me up to take vitals again. My BP dropped and my pulse jumped to 126! They asked how I was feeling and I said, “hmm OK. Not good but OK.” and they said, “Well based on your stats and the way you look, I think it’s best that we take you in.” Ok. I agreed because I was a little worried about the baby and I was just so freakin drowsy still that I just wanted to lay down!

So they got me into the ambulance and gave me some oxygen and an IV. I felt immediately better. Got to the hospital for an ECG, blood-work, and fetal heart rate check. All was fine! The stuff they checked in my blood – sodium, potassium, probably some other crap – came back a little low but everything was balanced which showed that I was indeed dehydrated. Heart was fine. Baby’s heart was fine at 168 bpm. After the IV was finished, I was sent home.

We called my dad, who was in the middle of a tattoo 45+ minutes away, because we weren’t sure if I’d be out in time to get Isabelle. Turns out he didn’t need to come but it was good to have him there. Unfortunately, it’s not the first time Johnas has had to call and say, “Um Bill, Jess is in the ER.” Actually, I’m pretty sure I was in the exact same room last time.

I was pretty certain as soon as I realized I passed out that I was dehydrated so all I felt was embarrassed. Well that and tired and nauseous! But, I was lucky to have caring co-workers to take care of me and get help.

So far today I’ve put down about 30 oz of water and 20 oz of juice. That’s pretty good for only being 4:30, right? Well, compared to yesterday anyway.

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You Will Read News: Beware the BUMP in your relationship – why …

As statistics suggest that one man in ten is unfaithful when his partner is pregnant, it seems that Vincent Simone’s pre-baby fling earlier this year wasn’t such an isolated case, as Anna Moore discovers

Vincent Simone and Kristina Rihanoff

Vincent Simone and Kristina Rihanoff in rehearsal for the Strictly tour last December. They started seeing each other soon after Vincent’s partner Susan Duddy announced she was pregnant

The safe arrival of baby Lucas in August has surely been a bittersweet affair for Susan Duddy, the air hostess and former partner of Strictly Come Dancing star Vincent Simone. When Susan became pregnant last December, she’d been with Vincent less than a year, but she was living in his Guildford home and the couple had discussed starting a family. But discussion is one thing – a real, live bump is quite another…

When Susan, 36, broke the news, the dancer, who has been dubbed the ‘Italian stallion’, showed a ‘mixed’ reaction. ‘He seemed confused,’ Susan later recalled. ‘One minute he was really excited, saying, “We’ll need to have another baby right after so there’s not a big age gap,” and the next moment he was freaking out about what it meant for his career.’

Still, the couple pressed ahead, put an offer on a larger house and started discussing names. Two weeks later, Vincent left for a Strictly tour – and promptly threw himself into an affair with fellow dancer Kristina Rihanoff (neglecting to tell her about Susan or the baby). He later confessed all to Susan, but flitted between the two women, blowing hot then cold, sometimes begging Susan’s forgiveness, before creeping off to meet Kristina.

Ten months on, Susan is living with her parents and newborn son. However, she and Vincent have not ruled out reconciliation – and are sufficiently united to pose for Hello! ‘Susan and I are bonding more now,’ said Vincent.

‘I’m going to be the best dad ever.’ The pregnancy, it seems, simply frightened the life out of Vincent, and he describes the experience as a mini-breakdown. ‘I was a mess,’ he explains. ‘When I look back at that time, I just see dark, a blur. I went off the rails. It wasn’t me.’ Even Kristina has backed this up, saying to the press, ‘I think Vincent was very confused and scared about becoming a father and panicked.’

In fact, the pre-baby fling may be more common than we suppose. While newly pregnant women are grappling with swirling hormones and a rapidly changing body shape, men have their own issues to fret over: responsibility, commitment and, realistically speaking, a lot less sex. An affair offers a refuge and, if need be, an exit.

Psychologist Robert Rodriguez, author of What’s Your Pregnant Man Thinking?, has worked with expectant couples for more than 20 years. His own surveys suggest that
ten per cent of men – the majority of them previously faithful – cheat on their partners during pregnancy.

A trawl through the internet would seem to back this up. On Mumsnet.com, the popular UK forum for mothers, a distraught user seeks advice after finding her husband strayed during her pregnancy. Elsewhere in cyberspace, a woman wonders why her husband stayed glued to her side through 16 years of fertility treatment, only to begin an affair when she became pregnant with twins.

In Sydney, there’s a woman whose husband of five years attributed his odd, erratic behaviour to his fears of impending fatherhood. In fact, he had also started a relationship with a colleague. ‘He was pretending to be unsure about being a dad, but really he was taking that time to romance and feather his nest before departing,’ the now single mother tells her online community.

Vincent Simone and Susan Duddy

Vincent with Susan Duddy. Though not together now, they haven’t ruled out giving their relationship another try

So what is happening? Surely there’s more to this than the fact that women may feel a little more tired and emotional and a little less attractive during the pregnant months? Even supermodel Heidi Klum found herself high and dry after becoming pregnant by F1’s Flavio Briatore. On the day that she announced she was expecting, he was papped kissing jewellery heiress Fiona Swarovski. But Heidi went on to meet singer Seal – while still pregnant – and she’s just had baby number four, a girl, to add to their brood.

Simon Jacobs, a psychotherapist who specialises in group counselling for men, certainly thinks that expectant fathers are affected. ‘Pregnancy – particularly when it’s your first – can be quite a lonely experience for men,’ he says. ‘There’s a lot of support for a woman – she slots into a community and has a high social status. There’s an excitement around her. People give her their seat on the train. She almost becomes public property. Her partner can soon start feeling like a spare part.’

At the same time, almost without exception, the man will be experiencing a whole range of emotions – from elation to pure panic. ‘There are fears around loss of control, loss of independence and feeling suddenly depended upon,’ says Jacobs. ‘The responsibility is a huge thing. A baby means a much bigger commitment than mere marriage.’

On top of this is a loss of identity. ‘Just as women often struggle with their place in the world as they enter motherhood, so do men,’ says Jacobs. ‘It sounds stereotypical, but, for many men, the ability to attract women is a huge issue, crucial to self-esteem. The image of a dad is less James Bond, and generally someone less dynamic. It’s the picture of cosy evenings in, reading bedtime stories to the children.’

‘Susan and I are bonding more now. I’m going to be the best dad ever’

Most damaging of all, however, is the fact that few men are likely to voice any of the above, and few pregnant women will want to hear it even if they do. ‘A pregnant woman wants to hear that her partner feels strong and solid and will be there for her all the way,’ says Jacobs. ‘In reality, I doubt that’s true for any man 100 per cent of the time. Men aren’t known to be great communicators, so what tends to happen is that their anxieties become internalised. And being isolated with difficult feelings can be a lethal combination.’

Reluctant to excuse the inexcusable, Jacobs does believe that a pre-baby fling can almost be a ‘cry for help. He may feel sidelined, neglected, frozen out by a preoccupied, pregnant partner. Some men do crave an awful lot of attention,’ he says. ‘The affair may be an indirect, inappropriate expression of all his suppressed fears; a way of saying what he’s unable to admit – to himself or anyone else.’

And it can also double up as an exit strategy. Alison, 44, had been with her husband Nick for four years when she became pregnant. It was only after the arrival of their daughter that she discovered he had begun an affair with a colleague four months into the pregnancy and ended it shortly before the birth.

‘Looking back, I can see that he had used various delaying tactics before agreeing to start a family,’ says Alison. ‘First he said we needed a bigger house, then he wanted to start a new business. Eventually, he couldn’t delay any more.’

Pregnancy was a challenge for Nick – a driven businessman who liked being in control and was used to being number one in Alison’s life. ‘He’d always said he wanted children, but when it actually happened I think he found himself way out of his comfort zone and panicked,’ says Alison.

‘As he saw it, an affair would offer an obvious escape route. It was fight or flight, and he chose to flee.’ When their daughter was a few months old, and they were still adjusting to life with a newborn, Nick reignited the affair and left. ‘He’d got it all set up and was out of the door before I had time to catch my breath,’ says Alison.

Mira Kirshenbaum, psychotherapist and author of When Good People Have Affairs, believes that, in some cases, pregnancy can act as the ultimate affair accelerator. ‘He may have been faithful up until this point, but he could still be harbouring doubts,’ she says.

‘A pregnancy will instantly magnify any pre-existing issues. The walls of domesticity close in and a man may feel he’s in too deep. A pre-baby fling can be a means of exit – but one that’s messy, stressful and terrifically painful.’

The mess and pain can have terrible consequences. Tests on pregnant women have found that, during stressful times, the foetal heart rate goes up. Immense stress during pregnancy has been linked to slower growth and smaller babies, as well as an increased risk of preterm delivery. While Susan Duddy struggled to save her relationship with Vincent Simone, she was rushed to hospital suffering severe stomach pains and a threatened miscarriage.

Can any relationship survive such a betrayal? Do Susan and Vincent stand any hope of raising Lucas as one happy family? Relate counsellor Mo Kurimbokus says yes – though probably only with professional help.

‘If you have two people committed to that relationship, no matter how difficult the situation, of course you can make it through,’ he says. ‘But first you would need real, true communication, to talk to one another and listen, and really understand the feelings and emotions that have been hidden.’

Simon Jacobs, however, is less optimistic. ‘I suspect it breaks most relationships,’ he says. ‘It has to be the worst possible time to cheat. A woman is so vulnerable – physically and emotionally. You’re laying the foundations for the future and if a man is willing to risk everything at a time like that, you have to ask whether he’s capable of maintaining all the responsibility that comes with a family. I think it’s doubtful.’

If cyberspace is any indicator, it seems that, for most women, a pre-baby fling blows away any chance of a happy ending. It’s just a betrayal too far.

The single mother in Sydney says she’s ‘doing OK’ with her three-month-old baby – and advises women to record their partners’ conversations…

On Mumsnet.com, a woman whose husband initiated a pre-baby fling with an ex when she was just three months pregnant knew immediately that forgiveness was off the agenda. There was no need for a scene, no point in discussion. She kept her discovery secret and chose her moment. ‘I waited three months and asked him very calmly to leave on 1 April,’ she writes. ‘I had the last laugh.’

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Are You In Line for the H1N1 Vaccine?

I’ll be the first one to admit I was initially skeptical of the severity of the H1N1 virus when it first hit the media this past summer. When the controversy over the vaccine surfaced, I leaned towards not getting it, but now that we know a lot more about the virus and the effects it has had on our country, I am much more likely to get the vaccine if I can even get on the list. Because I am over 25 and my son is older than 6 months, I just missed the requirements for being in the high priority group – the first people to get access to the vaccine – but my son is on the waiting list for when the vaccine is available in my area.

Talking to my son’s pediatrician addressed many of the concerns I had about the vaccine. I wrote about this on the baby blog a few weeks ago. You can read about what he said here: Flu Shots for Babies. I was worried about him getting sick from the vaccine, for example, but apparently that is a myth about flu shots.

Tonight I saw a very sad story on the news about a woman who died shortly after she gave birth to a baby girl through emergency cesarean section. She had gotten sick with H1N1. Fortunately the baby girl lived, but her grandparents are heartbroken that she’ll never know her mother. Pregnancy compromises the immune system, making it even harder for pregnant woman to battle the flu. Pregnant woman will be some of the first to be able to get the H1N1 vaccine and doctors are strongly recommending that all pregnant women get the vaccine to protect themselves. The secondary benefit of getting the vaccine while pregnant is that you will pass on the immunity to your child.

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What Is Pregnancy Tea And How Safe Is It?

pregnancy teaPregnancy tea or herbal tea is a kind of tea that is made not from the usual tea leaves, but from other herbs and has been used for centuries for helping with easing the discomforts of pregnancy and also with improving the pregnant woman’s health.

This herbal tea may be made from roots, berries, flowers, seeds, and leaves of a variety of plants rather than from the actual tea plant leaf.

However there are questions often raised about the safety of pregnancy teas and the herbs contained therein during pregnancy.

If you are planning to use pregnancy teas, it is a good idea to decide based on the following pros and cons:

  • Pregnancy teas contain no caffeine since they are not made from tea leaves that are typically fermented and oxidized
  • They are known to help with preterm labor or long term labor
  • Some experts believe that pregnancy teas can help prevent preeclampsia
  • It is also thought that these herbal teas may help with postpartum bleeding

Also it is important to remember that regular tea contains beneficial antioxidants, which most women can continue to have safely throughout pregnancy.

One of the doubts that women face when considering pregnancy teas is the fact that many formulations contain raspberry leaf which is thought to induce contractions.

However, this is thought to be safe to take during pregnancy and in fact is thought to have benefits such as shortening labor, and regulating date of delivery. It may even ease labor pains and help in lactation.

Though there has not been adequate research carried out on herbal teas to accurately gauge their safety and efficacy during pregnancy on both the woman as well as the fetus; it is generally recommended by medical practitioners that use of pregnancy teas may best be avoided during the first trimester of pregnancy.

While most practitioners clear herbal teas for consumption in moderate quantities during pregnancy, it is important that the ingredients be checked before buying.

It is best to buy the kind of pregnancy teas that do not contain strong bitter herbs such as feverfew, tansy, goldenseal, bloodroot, broom, mandrake, and barberry.

Herb is also thought to be best avoided. Other ingredients to watch out for are Peruvian bark, poke, cotton root, and male fern. Even laxative herbs, like senna and cascara are to be avoided according to some experts.

So pregnancy teas are fine so long as you keep a vigilant eye on the list of ingredients.

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What Prenatal Tests Should You Consider?

prenatal testPrenatal diagnosis of any abnormalities can be done by a range of available prenatal tests.

These prenatal tests can detect birth defects such as neural tube defects, Down syndrome, chromosome abnormalities, genetic diseases and other conditions, such as spina bifida, cleft palate, Tay Sachs disease, sickle cell anemia, Thalassemia, cystic fibrosis, and fragile x syndrome.

Some tests and checks during gestation are routine, such as Ultrasounds.

However more invasive methods such as amniocentesis for detecting birth defects are done only when indicated.

In the usual course, only non invasive techniques and tests are considered; such as the examination of the woman’s uterus from outside the body, obstetric ultrasounds from 7 weeks to confirm pregnancy dates, the specialized nuchal scan at 11-13 weeks may be used to identify higher risks of Down’s syndrome.

Later morphology scans from 18 weeks may check for any abnormal development. External fetal monitoring may be done when indicated. The obstetrician will also routinely check the fetal heartbeat; check the pregnant woman’s blood pressure, weight and other physical characteristics.

More invasive methods of detecting fetal abnormalities may be considered:

  • If a woman has become pregnant for the first time when over the age of 35
  • If a woman has previously had one or more miscarriages, premature babies or babies with a birth defect, especially heart or genetic problems
  • If a woman has previously had a still birth or the child has died soon after birth
  • If a woman has high blood pressure, lupus, diabetes, asthma, or epilepsy
  • If the pregnant woman has a family history or ethnic background prone to genetic disorders, or whose partners have these
  • Women who are pregnant with multiples (twins or more)

In the event that the above factors raise the possibility of complications and birth defects, then invasive methods of testing are considered, such as Chorionic villus sampling, Amniocentesis Embroscopy and fetoscopy. These methods are however associated with the chance of a miscarriage (with Chorionic villus sampling there is chance about 1% and with Amniocentesis it is about .5%). So the probable risks have to be considered prior to getting any invasive tests done.

Even after the tests are conducted and results indicate some or other abnormality, women have to consider whether they are emotionally and physically prepared to abort the fetus, because it is the very few cases wherein any kind of corrective measures can be carried out on the fetus.

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Female Fitness and Nutrition Scientist: Pregnancy and Weight Lifting

Pregnancy: It seems to me that society treats this as such a delicate time. But, really, does it have to be like that?

What I’m referring to mostly is weight lifting exercise, and what pregnant women can and can not do to help them have a healthier and happier pregnancy and delivery.

When I did a Google image search for pregnancy and exercise (or weight lifting), all I saw were pictures of very pregnant women doing yoga or ball exercises. The only weight lifting picture I could find was the one you see above. And, I wouldn’t even really consider that weight lifting (I think the last time I did a lateral shoulder raise I was 16 years old and a newbie). No squatting, no pushups, no chipups, nada.

But, what I really want to know, and what I need help from YOU (the female “you”, that is), is how and can a pregnant woman lift during her pregnancy?

Obviously, in the first 3-4 months, almost anything that you can tolerate should be do-able (when there’s not any nausea or uncontrollable fatigue). Then after the belly starts to bulge, any supine (lying on back) positions, should be avoided due to the potential to restrict blood flow through the vena cava.

The American College of Ob/Gyn has a one-sentence line about strength training:

Strength training will make your muscles stronger and may help prevent some of the aches and pains common in pregnancy. ”

But, other than this, it’s really a grey (or gray) area as far as weight lifting and pregnancy goes.

So, I’m doing as much research as I can here, scanning the peer-reviewed literature, and reading text books. But as I said, I need some help from real women who have lifted during their pregnancies:

What did you and could you do for weight lifting during your pregnancy?

Did you stop and just walk or doing light aerobics?

Did you keep doing what you were doing prior, but with some modifications (and what were they)?

Did you train harder? Did you try a new training program (And which one)? Etc.

I’d love to hear what you ladies out there did. One of my readers told me she was doing pull-ups the day before she delivered (wicked!) and another said she road her bike 10 miles a few days prior to delivery (and she was 2 weeks late, so she was quite big at this pt).

You can post your reply here, or send me an email (cassandraforsythe@gmail.com).

I promise that your thoughts and comments will be kept private if that’s what you’d like. Also, this information might end up as an article in the next issue of Muscle and Fitness Hers and Fit Pregnancy.

Cheers to a healthy and strong pregnancy!

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Remembering Pregnancy

Pregnancy: I loved being pregnant, for the most part that is, although I was very sick most of it, (about 5 months). We lived in Washington during the first few months of my pregnancy next to Andrew’s parents house. I will always remember how Andrew just lit up when he found out I was pregnant! I woke him up in the early morning to tell him. It was nice to know why I was SO EMOTIONAL! Soon we moved to Idaho for School. I finished another semester at BYU-I. I was very proud of myself with the grades I had gotten. They weren’t as good as they normally would have been, but being in early stages of pregnancy, I think I did very well! Unfortunately it wasn’t working out for us there, so we started debating where to move, back home or somewhere else. We chose Utah, so once again we moved in our early marriage, and my pregnancy to Utah. During that time we also went to visit Andrew’s Grandpa Smith who was in the hospital. In may we went back up to Washington for Andrew’s family reunion, and while we were up there we visited my family too! When I had the baby my mom came down and helped me out when Myles was about 2 weeks old! It was so nice and she was very helpful. My sister Cori also came and helped me out when I actually went into labor, which I loved! And my sister Nona came down and made us dinner one time which was so delish! (Homemade refried beans!). The picture with all of the people is my family:)
I miss having the little flutters in my tummy. The first time I had felt him move we had gone to the hot springs, and I was really sick. I think he was upset because I jumped off the diving board! I wasn’t a very good pregnant woman. I even when four wheeling with that belly of mine.
But I will say having a baby is so much better than being pregnant. I love my little Myles.
The Cravings…
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Periods During Pregnancy – Are They Cause For Worry?

vaginal bleedingMany of us have heard about an aunt or a friend’s relative or someone known vaguely to have had a pregnancy where the woman continued to have her periods during her pregnancy.

You may have heard that in some cases the woman did not even know she was pregnant until she was quite a long way along. While this is not common, it is known to happen and in some cases it is not a matter of worry.

Why does it happen?

The reason why a woman menstruates in the usual course is that the hormones that drop to signal the body that there has been no fertilization of an egg; no pregnancy and the uterus therefore sheds the lining which results in a period.

During pregnancy there is usually no such drop in the hormonal levels; which instead continue to rise and therefore result in the absence of periods.

The body perceives that all available resources are required to nourish the fetus and that they cannot be expended any other way so the pregnant woman generally stops getting her period; in other words the uterine lining that is shed every month by way of periods is not shed; instead it is used to provide a hospitable environment for the developing fetus.

However in some pregnancies, there is the case of Decidual Bleeding which happens when the usual rise and fall of hormone levels is somehow disturbed and part of the uterine lining is caused to be shed periodically even when there is a pregnancy subsisting.

Decidual bleeding is more common during the early part of pregnancy, however many women do continue to get a period like discharge throughout their pregnancy.

What is however more common is that this period like discharge happens in the early part of the pregnancy, before the placenta has been fully established. This is usually not something that has to be worried about generally.

There is also frequently bleeding in the early part of pregnancy; what is called Implantation bleeding which happens when the fertilized egg ‘implants’ itself into the uterine lining and the placenta begins to form. Some women bleed during this time, and it is usually no matter of concern.

Though there are these instances where bleeding during pregnancy is not a matter of worry, we may add a note of caution here, that no bleeding during pregnancy should be ignored; any bleeding during pregnancy should routinely be reported to your physician or attending doctor. This is in order to rule out any abnormality or potential problem.

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