At 3 weeks the uterus measures the same as it was before you became pregnant. At this stage in pregnancy everything is still getting in place. You probably will not even show up positive on a home pregnancy test yet.
during routine prenatal visits a Doctor will measure you uterus in centimeters, your centimeters should equal gestational age. IE. 26 cm 26 weeks
No
That is a situation much preferable to a soft uterus after birth; that situation can lead to hemorrhage.
If you are healthy and normal then you should not need to do anything to keep the uterus in its normal anatomical position, it should remain in its normal anatomical position by itself.
Your uterus should close up when pregnant so that nothing can get in to cause an infection towards the baby.
The copper T does not block fluids from the uterus and should not cause dryness.
To support and then expel the fetus.
Sounds like fibroid uterus.
After the placenta is expelled from the body, the uterus immediately begins to shrink down to it's pre-pregnancy size. The nurse will feel for the fundus, or top, or the uterus and measure how far it goes down quite often. The uterus should be rather hard as it is contracting to normal size, but it may become soft, or boggy, and the nurse will massage the uterus until it becomes firm. The placenta will be stored in the hospital lab for about 2 weeks unless there are no complications and the parents request to take it home with them, for whatever reason.
No no uterus means no menstruation. If you retain even one ovary you may still get premenstrual pains etc.
The IUD should be at the uterine fundus, the deepest part of the uterus. It is not located in the cervix unless it is being expelled.
millions