That´s impossible to know. Many women have several miscarriages but succeed getting pregnant and go all the way.
Normally all miscarriages come out the vaginal way but there is no way to detect a miscarriage afterwards. Everything is gone.
There is a very good chance that the next pregnancy will be normal. Miscarriages in the first three months of pregnancy are extremely common. It would only be considered abnormal if you were to have two or more consecutive miscarriages.
Yes of course it can. Just because you have had 2 miscarriages does not mean that you cannot have a normal pregnancy - the abortions are irrelevant.If you haven't bled for the last six weeks your chances are good.
Yes
Yes. It is thought that about 50% of pregnancies end in miscarriages. Practically every woman I know has had at least one, my sister-in-law had four before her first baby , she now has five children. I once looked after a woman who had 11 miscarriages before she had a baby but this is in 26 years as a midwife. You can absolutely get pregnant after a miscarriage and your chances of having another miscarriage are very low. You should be sure and wait until your body is ready to try again...some docs say 3months some say to wait until 1 cycle has finished but ultimately it is up to you. If you have had some bleeding, but still think you are pregnant go to your OB right away for a ultrasound to confirm or rule out the miscarriage, many women bleed during pregnancy and are just fine, but if you are passing big clots chances are that is a miscarriage. Always go to your doc for the final say. Yes, definitely. Many women have miscarriages without even realizing it - and the majority of women who have had miscarriages go on to have healthy pregnancies. You might want to look into tips for high-risk pregnancies so that you can protect against another miscarriage, but try not to worry too much (easier said than done).yes
Many women can spot and then go on to have a perfectly normal pregnancy. However, it is also possible that it is a threatened miscarriage, but it is also a good sign that there is no cramping. Get as much rest as possible, and see if things progress. If you have had more than three consecutive miscarriages, it would be worth seeking for the medical reason why. A doctor will refer you to the appropriate specialist.
There doesn't seem to be any reason to suspect a miscarriage, but naturally it is common to be anxious about having one. Missed miscarriages are not especially common at your stage, as most occur earlier. Speak to your doctor for reassurance if this is worrying you.
could you have been pregnant? sounds similar to some descriptions of early miscarriage... cramping, clotting, then changing. most miscarriages probably take care of themsevles as that's nature's way, but the concern is an ectopic pregnancy/miscarriage that can cause life threatening problems in the mother.
yes the two babies that were there before are no longer there meaning that yes you can unless the doctor told you you had a miscarriage infection which would be a different story but yes you can still get pregnant
how far along are you? If you are several weeks, most of the time you can't ever tell unless you are cramping, and passing clots. That is the way it was when I had my miscarriages at only 9weeks.
am 18 and i lost my baby at 11weeks it was so painful and heartbreaking!! am the onli one 2 lose a baby in ma family! now life feels pointless!! :(
In medical terminology, any time a pregnancy is interrupted before term, it is called an abortion because the pregnancy was aborted or stopped. Miscarriage is another term for this, however, it implies natural causes leading to the loss of the pregnancy. Induced miscarriages performed through a woman's right to choose, are also abortions and now this terminology has become associated mostly in lay usage with these elective abortions as opposed to a natural miscarriage. But the terminology that is most appropriate in a medical sense for all interruptions of pregnancies, regardless of the cause, is the term "abortion" and in that use of the words, they mean the same.