From: Fertility News From Medical News Today
The type of treatment a woman receives after an early miscarriage
does not affect subsequent fertility, with around 80% of women
having a live birth within five years of their miscarriage,
concludes a study published on http://www.BMJ.com. Fifteen per cent
of pregnancies end in early miscarriage. For decades the standard
management of early miscarriage was surgical evacuation of retained
products of conception.
Respond to this topic on your own blog
Click and press Ctrl+C to copy and paste this discussion on your blog or site
Related Articles
Type Of Treatment For Miscarriage Does Not Have An Effect On Long Term Fertility
A study published on bmj.com today reports that the type of
treatment a woman receives after an early miscarriage does not
affect subsequent fertility. Around 80 percent of women have a live
birth within five years of their miscarriage. It is established
that fifteen per cent of pregnancies end in early miscarriage. For
decades the typical management of early miscarriage was surgical
evacuation of retained products of conception. However, this was
increasingly questioned.
New study says conceiving soon after miscarriage is safe
Miscarriage is a sad and often very private topic, as well as being
completely normal and extremely common. Depending on which figures
you look at, miscarriage strikes one in five women, or as many as
half if you include very early miscarriages. Whenever miscarriage
happens, it always brings grief and questions. One of those
questions [...]
Slow Embryo Heart Rate Could Be An Early Predictor of Miscarriage

A recent report in the journal Fertility and Sterility says that a
slow embryo heart rate could predict a miscarriage in women who
used in vitro fertilization (IVF) to get pregnant. The
study looked at 95 women with miscarriage in the first trimester
and 555 without miscarriage. There were slower embryonic heart
rates in the miscarriage group. "The boundary between
slow and normal embryonic heart rates has not been well established
in the infertile population," study co-author Dr. Zev Rosenwaks, of
Weill Medical College ...
What are the odds of having a first trimester miscarriage?
A miscarriage is the loss of a pregnancy before 20 weeks, and
miscarriage is of course the ultimate fear of every newly pregnant
woman. Let’s take a look at the statistics, and see what the
odds are of having a miscarriage in the first trimester, and what
the causes behind miscarriage can be. First trimester [...]
Higher Risk of Miscarriage After IVF in Overweight Moms
According to a report in Guardian, a new study has uncovered an
elevated risk of miscarriage in pregnancies conceived via IVF if
the expectant mom is overweight. Researchers compared outcomes in
318 moms who conceived via IVF. Those with a BMI between 18.5 and
24.9 had a 22% overall risk of miscarriage, whereas those with a
BMI above 25 had a 33% risk. When the data were adjusted to take
account of potential third factors such as age, smoking, and
previous history of miscarriage, the researchers found that the
women with higher BMIs had double the risk of miscarriage compared
to the moms with BMIs deemed healthy....Read Full Post