Miscarriage toilet pictures
What a Miscarriage Looks Like
Photo Essay: What a Miscarriage Looks LikeSubscribeGive A Gift
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Photo: Casey Kelbaugh
Photo: Casey Kelbaugh
Photo: Casey Kelbaugh
Photographs by Casey Kelbaugh
Photographs by Casey Kelbaugh
Photographs by Casey Kelbaugh
Photographs by Casey Kelbaugh
Photographs by Casey Kelbaugh
Photographs by Casey Kelbaugh
Photographs by Casey Kelbaugh; Word by Becca Leitman, Casey Kelbaugh, Words by Becca Leitman
Photographs by Casey Kelbaugh; Word by Becca Leitman, Casey Kelbaugh, Words by Becca Leitman
Becca Leitman is a psychotherapist and Casey Kelbaugh is a photographer based between New York City and the Catskills. Together they’re launching Carriage, a web3 space for people to share their miscarriage stories and support one another.
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Blood Clots of Miscarriage: What It Looks Like?
Miscarriage of a baby can be a very traumatic thing. Seeing a miscarriage can be even more traumatic. Miscarriage is defined as losing your baby prior to being 20 weeks or at the 20th week of pregnancy. About 50% of pregnancies result in a miscarriage, but many women do not even know they are pregnant yet and haven’t tested for pregnancy. After a positive pregnancy test, about 15% of those result in miscarriage. Miscarriage blood clot pictures can help you prepare if you have been told that you will probably lose your baby. This article will also help prepare you for what to expect with a miscarriage.
Before we take a look at some pictures, it is important to discuss bleeding during pregnancy.
If you have bleeding in early pregnancy, you are likely very nervous. Bleeding can be a very normal thing in the first 12 weeks and usually nothing to worry about. Most often, the pregnancy continues just fine and a healthy live baby is born. However, certain types of bleeding can be a sign of something more serious, especially if it’s heavy or accompanied by cramping.
It can be red like your period or a light brown in color. Spotting is usually normal and often a sign that the pregnancy has implanted in the uterus. This usually happens around the time of your expected period and then stops after a few days.
While a pregnancy can end at any time, these are the points when certain things are most noticeable such asonly seeing clots, seeing the pregnancy sac with an embryo, to seeing a fully formed baby. Please keep in mind these photos may be quite graphic, but are intended to help you prepare yourself.
4-5 Weeks
If you are 4 weeks pregnant, bleeding with clots, you may notice some white or grey tissue in the clots. At this point in pregnancy, you may not see a baby at all if you miscarry. The baby is less than ½ cm long or about the size of a grain of rice.
6 Weeks
You may have bleeding, clots and possibly be able to find a small sac filled with fluid, a very small embryo about the size of your pinky nail and a placenta attached. Some women have even found the umbilical cord at this time, but at six weeks it could still be difficult to find the baby.
Around the eighth week of pregnancy, a lot of women describe the tissue as looking like “liver.” The clots and placenta are dark red and very shiny. You may be able to find the sac and enclosed fetus. Your baby will almost look like a “kidney bean.” There is evidence of eyes that are sealed up and buds forming for arms and legs.
10 Weeks
If you miscarry at ten weeks the clots are darker red in color and are almost like jelly. In the clots, you may notice tissue that looks like membrane and this can be parts of the placenta breaking up. If you pull apart the clots, you will most likely find the gestational sac and you will see a formed baby inside the fluid. The baby now looks more like a baby with fully formed fingers, arms, legs and toes.
12 Weeks
The baby will most likely come out in the sac, but often the water breaks on its own at this point. You may notice after passing clots, you will then pass the baby with the umbilical cord still inside of you. Then the placenta is expelled. At this point in pregnancy, you may even be able to tell if your baby was a girl or a boy.
16 Weeks to 20 Weeks
In the sixteen to twenty week timeframe you may pass very large clots that look like “liver.” They may also be around the baby. You will also pass pieces of tissue that feel like membrane. At this time, you may notice water coming out of your vagina. Around twenty weeks, you most likely will give birth to a fully formed baby about the size of your hand.
If you notice miscarriage blood clot pictures, place a pad in your underwear. If you soak more than two pads an hour or have severe cramping, contact your doctor immediately or go to your nearest emergency room.
The doctor will take a look at your cervix to see if it is open. They will check your hCG levels to see where you are at in your pregnancy and then repeat the tests to see if the levels go up or down. If they go up your pregnancy is most likely progressing and if the levels drop you are most likely having a miscarriage. You will probably have an ultrasound to check for a heartbeat and make sure the pregnancy is not in your tubes.
If you are at risk for a miscarriage, you will most likely be sent home and told to rest. If the bleeding stops and you have pregnancy symptoms then the pregnancy is more likely to progress. If your pregnancy symptoms go away suddenly and you begin severe cramping and passing clots then the doctor will give you the option of passing the pregnancy at home. Your doctor may have you bring the clots and tissue in for examination.
“At eight weeks my pregnancy symptoms just disappeared overnight. Then I started to bleed so I called the doctor. They told me to rest, but I started getting really bad cramps and passed some pretty big clots. The bleeding then stopped suddenly. I knew I had miscarried and my periods returned about 6 weeks later. I was able to get pregnant again and had a successful pregnancy the next time around. ” --- Kaitlyn
“At around seven weeks I started bleeding and then passed about a two centimeter rubber-like piece of white tissue. I reminded me of a small piece of uncooked chicken. After this passed, a stringy clot about two inches long came out and then nothing else.” ---Julie
Miscarriage, symptoms - Health Clinic 365 Yekaterinburg
Causes of miscarriage
Questions to the doctor about miscarriage
Diagnosis of miscarriage
Treatment and prevention of miscarriage
According to statistics, 10 to 20% of all pregnancies end in miscarriage. However, the real numbers could be much higher, as a large number of miscarriages happen very early, and women are not even aware of their pregnancy. Most miscarriages happen due to abnormal development of the fetus.
Miscarriage is quite common, but this fact does not make things any easier. It is always difficult to cope with the realization that there was a pregnancy, but no child. Try to deal with the situation psychologically and understand what could be causing the miscarriage, what increases the risk of it, and what type of treatment might be needed.
Miscarriage symptoms .
Most miscarriages occur before 12 weeks. Signs and symptoms of a miscarriage include:
- Vaginal bleeding or spotting (although quite common in early pregnancy)
- Pain or cramps in the abdomen or lower back
- Fluid vaginal discharge or tissue fragments
It is important to consider the fact that in early pregnancy, spotting or vaginal bleeding is quite common. In most cases, women who experience light bleeding during the first three months have an uneventful pregnancy thereafter. In some cases, even with heavy bleeding, the pregnancy does not end in a miscarriage.
Some women who have a miscarriage develop an infection in the uterus. This infection, also called septic miscarriage, can cause:
- Fever (feeling hot, chills)
- Body pains
- Thick, foul-smelling vaginal discharge
When to see a doctor.
Call your doctor if:
- Bleeding, even if only light spotting occurs
- Profuse, liquid vaginal discharge without pain or bleeding
- Isolation of tissue fragments from the vagina
You can put a piece of tissue to be isolated in a clean container and take it to your doctor for examination. It is unlikely that the study will give any accurate results, but if it is determined that the fragments of the excreted tissue are from the placenta, the doctor will be able to conclude that the symptoms that appear are not associated with the presence of a tubal (ectopic) pregnancy.
You can get more detailed information about miscarriage from the gynecologists of the Health 365 clinic in Yekaterinburg.
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“I had a miscarriage”: how not to be afraid to talk about the experienced
- Anastasia Anisimova
- for BBC
Image copyright ASHLEY MACLURE
Michelle Obama's book, in which she confessed to having suffered a miscarriage, sparked a heated discussion in the West about why women still hesitate to talk openly about this topic. The release of the book coincided with the public confessions of Russian celebrities who also experienced the loss of an unborn child.
In her biographical book Becoming, the former First Lady of the United States revealed for the first time that she had a miscarriage before giving birth to her daughters, who were conceived through IVF.
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- The First Minister of Scotland admitted that she suffered a miscarriage
- Going online for an abortion: how women in different parts of the world circumvent bans
"I felt lost and lonely. I thought this was my problem. I didn’t know then how common miscarriages are. We don’t talk about it in society. We women keep this pain in ourselves. I think this is the worst thing that we ourselves do with ourselves - do not share with each other the truth about our body and about where there are failures, "said the ex-first lady in an interview with ABC television.
Michelle Obama's confession unexpectedly resonated in Russia. Last week, actress Evelina Bledans recorded a video message on her Instagram to subscribers asking them not to ask her about pregnancy, because "she didn't manage to have girls" (previously, the actress publicly stated that she was pregnant with twins).
A few days later, the NTV channel aired an interview with former State Duma deputy, opera singer Maria Maksakova, who told how she suffered a miscarriage in her second month of pregnancy.
Image copyright ASHLEY MACLURE
There is a discussion in the Western media about why today, when women are gradually winning their voice in all areas of life, they still talk about miscarriage in a whisper, while most do not talk at all.
"There is some terrible irony in this - millions of women around the world experience an abortion, and no one talks about it out loud," writes the Telegraph - The guilt that a woman holds in herself does not last for any period of time - it can haunt her all her life. Gradually, she just learns to live with it. "
How does a woman feel?
"A miscarriage is a lonely, painful, and internally destructive experience, practically on a cellular level," writes Michelle Obama in the book.
"A miscarriage is a fear. My fans who went to my concerts probably find it hard to believe, but during my second pregnancy, when I sang and danced on stage, I constantly felt inside this paralyzing fear that is born in you when you lose a child. Fear of losing another," recalls singer Beyoncé, who previously also admitted that she had experienced a miscarriage.
"A miscarriage is when you feel like an unwoman because you couldn't carry a baby. You feel like your own body is to blame, it let you down," says artist Ashley Maclure.
(photo by ASHLEY MACLURE
"This is a real grief. There is no other way to explain it. At that moment, the main thing I thought about was that I would not be able to give birth next time. After all, the age is already. I I was able to survive it only because I got pregnant after very quickly - after three months. If I hadn’t become pregnant, then I would have gnawed myself, probably, "recalls Maria Maksakova.
Despite the lack of public discussion, hundreds of comments can be found on Russian forums and social media groups from women who are trying to get over a miscarriage and figure out how to tell their parents, relatives, friends and new partners about it.
Why does she feel this way?
"It is difficult for all women to talk about miscarriages - this is a very personal topic. They blame themselves, first of all, for this, not realizing that the reason may lie, for example, in chromosomal abnormalities in the embryo itself, which does not directly depend on the woman ", - Elena Grishanova, a gynecologist, told the BBC Russian Service.
According to her, women in Russia are often afraid that men will leave them if they find out that they have had a miscarriage. "Women consider it their defect," says Grishanova.
Photo by ASHLEY MACLURE
Psychologists note that the information vacuum affects not only women themselves, but also their partners, who also experience serious stress, and society, which often does not know how to react when a woman decides to talk about his experience. Most simply do not understand what to say to a woman in this situation and how to support her.
What is real?
Pregnancy and childbirth are often shrouded in prejudices and superstitions. It is believed that it is impossible, for example, to photograph an ultrasound machine, many do not recommend cutting their hair during pregnancy, raising their hands high (do not hold on to the handrail on the bus) - and of course, it is not customary to announce your pregnancy in the early stages.
And the latter is far from being only a Russian phenomenon. The Guardian newspaper notes that in England, many women also keep silent about pregnancy in the first weeks and months - just in case, you never know what might happen ...
image copyrightASHLEY MACLURE
It really can happen. In the UK, this happens to one in four pregnancies. In Russia, it is not easy to count the number of miscarriages - Rosstat combines both natural abortion (miscarriage) and artificial (abortion) in one line. Russian Ministry of Health documents state that 10-20% of clinically diagnosed pregnancies end in miscarriage.
Doctors note that the real figure may be higher and includes the percentage of undiagnosed cases - not all women go to the doctor.
One of the main causes of miscarriage is genetic disorders in the fetus, other factors are also significant: immunological incompatibility of the couple, stress, infections and medications.
The British Women's Miscarriage Association stresses the importance of remembering that the chances of losing a baby due to the actions - or inactions - of the woman herself are extremely small.
Photo by ASHLEY MACLURE
Doctors urge women not to hide the pain inside and not to hush up this topic, but to share their experience with loved ones, and especially with their growing children.
In the US, a discussion has begun about how exactly teachers should teach students about miscarriages in sex education classes.