I had one about 5 years ago and my doctor put me on bc pills so i wouldn't get pregnant after. He told me it is more likely to come back within the next yr after having a molar pregnancy....but I would consult my doctor if i were you bc ive heard alot of others that are ttc and they have a baby 6 months after....good luck!!
A molar pregnancy is an abnormally fertilized egg. Molar pregnancies occur when the fertilized egg does not have any of the mother's chromosones, or the father's chromosones duplicate.
Depending how far along you were, it could take a while for the HCG and the progesterone to come down. You could experience symptoms until that happens.
Yes it can!
I had a molar pregnancy and my doctor recommended to wait at least one year to try again. Then I had a miscarriage and after that, I had two more kids.
If it's a single pregnancy then it's not pregnant & i would ask your doctor to do an ultrasound asap. please read about molar pregnancies just so u understand all the possibilites.
58912
Being pregnant causes HGC to be in your body. If you want more detail than that; it's a hormone that your body produces when you are pregnant. That is what home pregnancy tests detect. If you have HGC in your urine, you are pregnant. P.S. its actually HCG... if you'd like info on HGC, please go to this wikipedia link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HGC
risk of uterine perforation
Molar pregnancy is a rare condition where abnormal tissue grows in the uterus instead of a normal pregnancy. The key difference between partial and complete molar pregnancies lies in the genetic makeup of the abnormal tissue. In partial molar pregnancies, there is an abnormal fetus with some normal placental tissue, while in complete molar pregnancies, there is no fetus and all the tissue is abnormal. Diagnosis of molar pregnancy is typically done through ultrasound and blood tests to measure hormone levels. Treatment usually involves removing the abnormal tissue through a procedure called dilation and curettage (DC). In complete molar pregnancies, there is a higher risk of complications such as persistent trophoblastic disease, which may require additional treatment like chemotherapy. Partial molar pregnancies have a lower risk of complications compared to complete molar pregnancies.
If you are experiencing a placenta but no live baby, then a doctor will need to perform a D&C on you. It is effectively an abortion. They scrape down the insides of your uterus and remove all pregnancy related tissue. You will bleed for 1-2 weeks afterwards as if you have given birth and then your body will "re-set" itself and recognise you are not pregnant. This is a blighted ovum or possibly a molar pregnancy. Tis is not a phantom pregnancy, a phantom pregnancy is all in the mind.
Nothing, she just got her molar first is all.
it might be a molar pregnancy