You may have a hormonal imbalance. Contact your Doctor for a blood test to check your hormone levels & also ask for another ultrasound that will look in detail at your Ovaries to see if there are any cysts present. Cysts on the Ovaries is usually a indication of PCOS.
Ultrasound.
That's normal. You'll probably see it later in the pregnancy if the ultrasound is repeated.
A normal pregnancy lasts 10 months since it's 40 weeks.
It is normal for this to happen during pregnancy. Your doctor will not treat this. He will say it is normal for you.
Yes it is.
Generally from the ultrasound, when there is more than one baby. However, before the ultrasound there can be some indicators, such as pregnancy symptoms being stronger than normal or your abdomen getting bigger earlier on in the pregnancy than it usually would
The most common reason for ultrasound in early pregnancy is to determine how far along you are and figure out a due date. Later pregnancy ultrasounds are usually just routine to make sure everything is normal as the baby grows. Most commonly, a doctor will do a 20 week ultrasound where they will do all of their measurements and make sure everything is developing normally, and tell you the gender if you would like to know. After the 20 week ultrasound, unless you are having complications, it is unlikely that you will get another ultrasound until towards the end if the pregnancy.
This is essentially a normal kidney ultrasound. A mild cortical echogenicity in both kidneys, and normal renal function can occur in pregnancy when your over-all blood volume is increased.
A normal full term pregnancy is approximately 9 months for a human.
Normal results after an endorectal ultrasound are normal, healthy tissues
yes! i went 4 whole months through pregnancy. with out knowing. still having my normal periods each month. i took a test just because the feeling was starting to feel uncomfortable, and guess what.. it was negative! i finally went to the doctor.. sure enough i was 4/ almost 5 months!! wow
It depends on the context. A negative pregnancy test or negative culture means pregnancy hormone or sought-for pathogen were not found. A negative x-ray means normal. A pertinent negative is a "no" answer in the history that helps narrow the diagnosis. (For instance, a woman with no period for six months reports no intercourse with a man in ten years. That's a pertinent negative.)