You're probably about to die. Make a will and say your prayers.
Hello, Blood can be difficult to see on a ultrasound. Picture a ultrasound picture, the images are grey and hazy. Also if you are 4 weeks pregnant the pregnancy would not be visible on a ultrasound scan until you were 6 weeks pregnant. The only person who can accurately and thoroughly read a ultrasound is a Radiographer or a Obstetrician Doctor. I would make a appointment with your Doctor, have a pregnancy blood test performed and book a ultrasound scan for 2-3 weeks time. You need a quantitative beta HCG blood test to measure the level of HCG in your blood which will also tell you if your pregnancy is viable. Good luck.
it might be a molar pregnancy
Eh?
ok, i can answer my own question now. the answer may help someone else. My daughter was pregnant and passed tissue we thought was a miscarriage. ultrasounds showed that her uterus had shed lining and become thin again. we were told by the doctor it was a miscarriage. she had to return in two weeks to get her pregnancy hormone level checked until it returned to 0. well her level had gone up from 562 to 8000 after the suspected miscarriage. had to go back to the doctor immediately and another ultrasound showed an etopic pregnancy. had to do surgery immediately.
Yes you can be. Around 10 wks your hormones decrease a little. You should see a doctor if your hcg level is decreasing though. It could be a sign that you are losing the pregnancy or that it was a twin pregnancy and you lost one of the twins.
No. If you think you may be pregnant and your home test says different; trust your body. A doctor will do a blood test which will not only show right away; a 'quantitative' test can tell the level of hcG, telling about how long since you conceived. Which can be double checked with an ultrasound if necessary.
whats the highest level of study in ultrasound
Yes, more alkaline
As long as your working with your doctor to monitor and manage your thyroid condition during pregnancy, eventually your TSH and T4 should level off. If you have any concerns, talk with your doctor.Related Article: Pregnancy and Your ThyroidRelated Article: Pregnancy and Thyroid Medication
I hate to scare you, but that is a possibility. Bleeding during pregnancy is common, however, large amounts are usually a sign of some sort of complication. While I am not a doctor, I have had 2 miscarriages, both occurring before week 12. Depending on how far along you are, a doctor may be able to confirm a presence or lack of a heartbeat via ultrasound or transvaginal ultrasound. After two miscarriages, I started bleeding again with the third around wk7. I bled for almost 2 months but at 30 weeks I delivered a little girl. So, bleeding does not always leed to miscarriage, but it is a possibility. Go to the doc to ease your mind. Not knowing is torture.
The only reason you would have a positive test with no fetus means either it's a somatic pregnancy (in your head) it's ectopic (in you fallopian tube) or you have cancerous tumors in your liver. Get a HCG Beta Subunit (ask for this) from your doctor. It's a blood test to determine your exact HCG level
Are you asking what level of hCG (human chorionic gonadotropin) must be in the blood to indicate pregnancy? Any level of Hcg is an indication of pregnancy. hCG is a hormone produced only during pregnancy, which is what they look for in both a blood, or urine pregnancy test. Hope this answers your question. =)