Yes it can. In fact mine did.
Between 2 and 10% of IUDs fall out (usually in the first year of use).
The risk of expulsion is increased if:
an IUD was inserted right after delivery
an IUD has fallen out previously
you have never been pregnant
The IUD is not likely to change the odds of UTI. Talk with your health care provider about possible causes.
An IUD doesn't affect how long semen (or sperm) stays in the uterus. The copper IUD interferes with sperm mobility, lowering the odds of pregnancy. The progesterone IUD thickens the cervical mucus, making it difficult for the sperm to meet the egg.
I don't have hard statistics, but if the IUD is that low, I would think your odds of continuing are pretty good.
Most women do not expel their IUDs. The rate of IUDs falling out is somewhere between 2% and 11%.
Infinitesimal.
There are seven different week days; the probability of any specific date falling on any given week day (for a year chosen at random) are 1/7.The odds of September 7 falling on a Tuesday are exactly 14%.(In the Julian calendar, the odds are exactly 1/7.)
Falling pregnant with an IUD in place can up your chances of having a miscarriage. Attempting the removal of the IUD can also cause a miscarriage. The risks of leaving it in depend on where it is situated as in some cases the IUD can injure the baby, placenta or uterus. In a number of cases the baby will be perfectly healthy and experience no ill-effects and in a small number of cases baby's have been born holding the IUD in their hand!
A Multiload IUD is a copper IUD.
(1/5)*(1/4) = 1/20 the odds of a quarter falling out, multiplied by the odds of a quarter falling out after a single quarter has fallen out
The ParaGard IUD is T shaped and it contains copper.
You can get trichomoniasis regardless of whether you have an IUD. The IUD does not cause or prevent trich.
You can get an infection with or without the IUD. Expulsion of an IUD doesn't increase the risk of infection.