No, you would not be able to push hard enough for that. The fetus is very well protected.
It depend on what trimester you are in. If it is the first trimester, your body will feel okay in about a week. If you have a miscarriage in the second trimester or later, you are likely to experience abdominal pain and really heavy bleeding. The body may take up to a month to heal.
Most of the time, stomach pain and light cramps in the first trimester are completely normal, because your uterus is starting to really stretch out, and your body is getting used to being pregnant. Most first trimester stomach pains and cramps are due to your newly stretching uterus.
I think you can. You have to hit really really hard though, hard enough to hurt you too. Your uterus can rupture, the fetus can get hurt but not die and you can end up bleeding to death. If someone hurts you, call the police. If this is another way to find out how to abort at home - get to a clinic and have it safe and legally done. The person hitting you, and you if you are in on it, can get sent to prison for illegal abortion or murder for it.
Once past 12 weeks the placenta is functioning and the chance of miscarriage is greatly reduced. Unless there is a particular reason (medical) why you may have a miscarriage the risk is so small that you can forget it.
Yes, it is usually termed miscarriage and is quite common, especially in the first trimester. It is estimated 20% of pregnancies end in miscarriage though the actual figure could be mych higher since it is thought many miscarriages occur before the woman realises she is pregnant.
Yes you can have a miscarriage at 3 months pregnant, although only a very small percentage do at this point. Not really true, it is not a "small percentage," compared to the number of miscarriages. True, miscarriages occur during the 1st 3 months, and many do not even realize they were pregnant. It is not always a "real" pregnancy - sometimes an unfertilized ovum will implant, and then sluff off. More miscarriages happen during the 2nd trimester than the 3rd trimester. Technically, during the 3rd trimester is is a "spontaneous abortion" not a "miscarriage". But if you are "at 3 months" you are right in the zone of "most often". If you are trying to stay pregnant, and worried about it - see your doctor. Otherwise, good care of your own health is good care of the health of the baby.
Not really. If you are bleeding, you should see a doctor. It could be nothing and it could be serious. Most likely with a miscarriage you will have pain in your stomach and the blood will be chunky, but not always. I'd see a doctor if I were bleeding any amount at all, with or without pain.
First I am sorry to hear that you are bleeding or spotting during pregnancy. I know it can be a scary thing. Whether or not it is serious really depends upon how far along you are. Spotting in the first trimester is not uncommon and is generally okay. That said, you should not take it lightly though in case any complications do present themselves. Spotting in the first and second trimester are not okay. That does not mean you are going to have a miscarriage but it certainly is not healthy and you should call your doctor and go to the ER right away. When you are spotting during pregnancy it is a good idea to wear a pad or pantie liner. This will keep you aware of just how much you are bleeding.Signs of Miscarriage:# Vaginal Bleeding # Cramping # Tissue being passed Signs of Ectopic Pregnancy:# Cramping # Sharp pains in your stomach # low hCG levels# vaginal bleeding Signs of Molar Pregnancy:# Vaginal Bleeding # clusters seen via ultrasound # no heartbeat detected via ultrasound # hCG levels unusually high
not really,but they can pushed then be printed
All we know so far that it was "A" who pushed Ian & they haven't showed who "A" really is.
If you really had a miscarriage, you can't still be pregnant, but you could be pregnant again before you get your next period.
Morning sickness really starts during first trimester but it will subside if the hormones progesterone comes down in the second trimester.