

Your doctor will give you plenty of advice, often without you asking for it. While you may have heard the heartbeat, I know you can still feel anxious about your baby's health even with this reassuring sign. Miscarriage can be a very real fear for many mothers and I think a good relationship with your doctor is an excellent way to help you feel more at ease with your pregnancy. If my baby is really gone, I at least want the ultrasound picture. I have another doctor's appointment next week to see how the process is going along. I am still carrying my baby and am waiting for nature to take its course. It has been been a horrible experience and I wouldn't wish this pain on my worst enemy.

I just had another ultrasound two days ago (12 weeks gestation) and they couldn't find a heartbeat. I lost the first baby at six weeks, and then they gave me an ultrasound at eight weeks and the second baby was fine, growing normally and heartbeat was perfect. They said call your doctor and walked out. I am/was 7 weeks, one day along and 40 years old. Today, I went back for another one and they could not detect the heartbeat. I went for an ultrasound four days ago and we heard the heartbeat. The doc called later that day and said they are concerned but just come in on Friday for an us and blood. Go home and the doctor will call you with your options.Īfter I cried and stayed home from work, I began to get angry that the nurse would put that much stress on us. Then they sat us down and said you will probably miscarry because the baby is not as big as it should be. My husband and I went for a 7 week ultrasound and they saw the heart beat at 107 bpm. Take care of yourself and watch what you do, but remember that if it happens, there was nothing you could have done to prevent it! Do not feel guilty. It usually happens because the baby was not OK to begin with and nature took its course. My hormones were low and there was nothing they could do. I had a miscarriage in my seventh week during my first pregnancy. And as someone said above: I wouldn't wish that on my worst enemy! It truly is the most horrible feeling and pain to miscarry. Seeing all of these posts makes me excited to see a heartbeat, but scared that I could miscarry after. I have since gone to a fertility doctor and I am six weeks pregnant and due to have my seven week ultrasound on Tuesday and I am terrified. I started to bleed, was sent to the hospital and then it was confirmed a couple days later when they tested my hcg levels. I had a miscarriage in June and was devastated by it. It happens all the time after the heartbeat is detected. I think this information is misleading because they definitely happen often after you've seen a heartbeat.

One was at eight weeks, one at 13 weeks, and one at six weeks. What are the Symptoms of a Missed Miscarriage?.What are the Most Common Causes of Multiple Miscarriages?.Scan at 6 weeks,heartbeat seen and all looking normal,scan at 8 weeks heartbeat normal and measuring correctly, scan at 10 weeks,all well- dd born at 41 weeks. Pregnancy 4- hcg taken at 4 weeks due to previous losses,high and more than tripled in 48 hours.

Scan at 6 weeks heartbeat seen but very slow. Pregnancy 3- Hcg taken due to previous mmc very low and only rising 60% over 3 days. Scan at 9 weeks- diagnosed missed miscarriage. Scan at 7 weeks heart beat seen but baby small for dates and heart beat slow. Pregnancy 2- Pain again, so scan at 5 weeks and hcg taken,4 lots of blood taken and hcg was barely rising by 25% over 72 hours, no where near doubling. With my pregnancies- Pregnancy 1- had a scan at 6 weeks due to pain, heartbeat seen and normal, hcg doubling - scan at 9 weeks, heart beat fine and measuring correct- ds born at 40 weeks. I completely understand the anxiety that comes with a previous loss and that there’s very little that will reassure you except seeing your baby on a scan but if it’s any consolation my pregnancy’s that ended in miscarriage had outward signs from the start. As others have said if everything else seems normal then it’s usually a good sign and the risk reduces.
