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Yes, there are times when it is possible to have a Vaginal Birth After Cesarean (VBAC). Women who have a low transverse scar from the previous C-section are eligible for VBAC. It can also depend on why the first c-section happened. If the mothers pelvis is small it may not be possible for VBAC, if the first baby didnt fit the second may not either. If the scar on the uterus is an up and down scar or vertical, a VBAC is not recommended due to the potential for uterine rupture. As the uterus grows during the pregnancy the body of the uterus gets thinner and may rupture with uterine contractions. This is not typically an issue with the low transverse uterine scar as that scar is thru a thicker portion of the uterus that does not thin out as much as the uterus grows during pregnancy.
There is some research to suggest that if you wait nine months, that is, there would be 18 months between deliveries, that this results in a lower rate of uterine rupture.
The success rate for vaginal birth after cesarean section in patients who have had a prior low transverse uterine incision is approximately 70%.
Yes.
I wouldn't think so since afterwards you bleed like a stuck pig due to the sloughing off of all the uterine lining. But I suppose anything's possible.
No. You can get pregnant after a C-section
I would like to know what causes reversed contractions Have never met anyone who knows Fifty years ago, the doctor said I had reversed contractions while giving birth, thus leading to a C-Section. many people I have talked to in the medical field say there is no such thing as reversed uterine contractions.
c-section
Its called a "D and C" (D&C)
D & C (Dilatation and Curettage.)
repeat c section procedure code
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