Page 2 of comments on Ovulation After Miscarriage
by Elizabeth Morgan
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The statement that "nearly 1 in 200 women" will experience a miscarriage is simply wrong. The miscarriage rate is unfortunately MUCH higher than that, with many experts now believing that virtually ALL women will experience a miscarriage at some point in their reproductive lives. Many of these occur very early in pregnancy, and not recognized by the woman who thinks she merely had a late period.
This piece seems like it is rife with inaccuracies. The miscarriage rate among recognized pregnancies is around 15 percent. Also, HPV does not _cause_ miscarriages, as this article seems to suggest. This article is not very informative.Hello there you are so right about HPV and cousing M/C's i have HPV and my doctor told me and my husband I and baby will be fine if we were to have another child so i dont know were this ladys getting her info ?????? she should know over 70 to 80 % percent of woman have had HPV or dont know they have it there is over 200 diffrent kinds out there they said i had it for 5 years and i have since then 2 little angles :) :).Agree! Who is Elizabeth Morgan and where is she getting this information. HPV DOES not cause infertility or miscarriage. Most women and men carry the virus. If a HPV infection is present during pregnancy it does have to be treated etc but does not threaten a pregnancy.Miscarriages are caused by several different reasons such as chromosomal disorders, infections or hormonal disorders but never HPV.It is to bad I have read this article more than once on the internet.
Never before have I commented on a random article out there but this one shows how you can't trust everything you read, and unfortunately this is the second time I have run into this article. It seems many others have been wronged by reading Elizabeth Morgan's inaccurate articles. I know I won't read another one.
simply wrong
i dont believe that ovulation can occur within two weeks after a miscarraige, because the body needs much time to adjust to a normal cycle before releasing an egg. it takes over a month for nomal cycles to retrun.Actually, ovulation can follow a mc very quickly. My eldest son is a testament to that. I had a mc on April 4th, 1995, on May 12th, 1995 I had positive pg test at the health dept. Ironically, my mother was the administrator of the dept, and was the one who performed the test.She walked down to the hospital lab to speak with the Med Tech to see if it was possible to get a false positive approximately 5 wks post spontaneous mc. He replied "highly unlikely", and sure enough he was right. Turns out, I ovulated before the 2 wk window that this article suggests.My doctor sent me in for sono, bc she wanted to make sure it wasn't a false reading due to retained tissue in the uterine lining. I was reported to be "approximately 5 wks" into gestation, and bc they couldn't go off of my LMP date, they used the start date of my mc.Don't mistake my reply as a defense of this article. You are right in stating that there are several inaccuracies, and yes, the mc rate is much higher than this reports. The difficult part of reporting statistics is this: Some women never experience a mc (or at least a known mc) and some experience 5 or more.Statistics in this area will always be off, because of the "unknown" miscarriages that occur. The most accurate rates I've seen are 1 in 5 women (so approximately 20%), and I think that number to also be grossly underestimated. However, what I think, and what can be medically proven are two entirely different things.But, as I said at the beginning of my note. It most definitely IS possible to ovulate within 1-2 wks post mc. Most women don't conceive on that first ovulation bc they either weren't ready to return to having sex, or never suspected that it was possible for it to occur that quickly. I assure you it is. I have a 13 yr old son to prove it...lol.I agree it all depends on the person and if you are having inner course pretty heavy right after i have 4 children and they were all conceived pretty quick lol :) :)I disagree with this comment. I miscarried 30 days ago and I'm already pregnant again.
I don't agree with much in this article either. Even in my small circle of close friends, several of them have had a miscarriage, so that 1 in 200 seems WAY off base to me. Also, you will not ovulate until your hormone levels are less than 5, and for me, it didn't reach less than 5 until four weeks after miscarriage.
Please mrs. Elizabeth read some books or something, if your not sure about something research it before posting wrong info for your best interest thank you!
Not helpful. An apparently healthy woman who has regular menstrual periods still may not be ovulating. A competent reproductive endocrinologist can evaluate the matter. And 1 in 200 women will have a miscarriage? Please. Are 195+ of those women celibate?
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