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Abc Medium. Abc Large. ThinkStock Photos Belly-button pain may occur on-and-off throughout pregnancy as you experience stages of rapid growth. By Dr Aruna Kalra Aches and pains during pregnancy is part and parcel of joy of pregnancy. Our body is changing and adapting to accommodate the growing foetus by relaxing our muscles and ligaments. Starting from 1st trimester till last trimester, pregnant women experience different kinds of pains, bloating, cramps and numbness. Parents Magazine, you need to write a retraction immediately and fact check your articles before printing false and possibly life threatening information.
There are NOT topical anti-itch meds to treat. There is oral medication to help with the symptoms but nothing treats Cholestatis. Babies must be delivered early as it can lead to preterm birth. And not in extreme cases! Shame on you for misinforming your readers about a serious health issue.
I would have expected better of you and will be watching for how you correct this. I encourage you to reach out to icpcare. It is dangerous misinformation like this that makes me upset and angry! You liver doesn't effectively filter the waste in your body and releases bile acid directly into your blood stream resulting in the premature aging of the placenta and can literally poison your unborn baby if it is not treated!
It affects only 1 in pregnancies. Topical itch cream does nothing for the itch of cholestasis. There is medication prescribed to help lower the bile acid level in your blood to help protect the baby. However, it cannot reverse the damage to your placenta that has already been done by the cholestasis. Frequent monitoring to make sure baby isn't in distress is needed throughout pregnancy. Frequent bloodwork to monitor bile acid levels is also suggested, as they can spike quickly and without warning.
Itching is NOT always on the hands and feet or at night! It can happen anywhere on the body! Even earlier is recommended for extreme cases. This pregnancy disease is incredibly unknown in both the general public and even in the medical community!
People need to get properly informed about the symptoms to watch for and the treatment protocols for it! Worst advice ever. Liver failure is not common or to be taken lightly! Only 1 in every 2, pregnancies will develop choliestasis. It's extremely rare; to give you an idea 1 in 1, women will get pregnant after a tubal ligation. That means 1. I had to be induced at 36 weeks to save my daughter's life. This is the worst advice ever. If you have symptoms of this condition, go see your doctor imediately to be tested!!!
This is such bad advice, Cholestasis of pregnancy causes stillbirth in 1 in 15 pregnancies, if left untreated. Severe itching is the classic symptom at night, hands and feet and should be cause for concern. The placenta ages prematurely from the excess bile acids in the blood, and babies should be delivered before 37 weeks.
Even then they can heave health problems. It's actually worse than 1 in I had it and had to be i duved at 36 weeks to save my babys life. Worst advice ever on here. I hope anyone reading this, also reads the comments! In extreme causes it can also cause massive organ failure throughout your whole body and put you in a coma on top of losing the baby. I know someone this has happened to. Choliostasis is a condition where your liver shuts down. When this happens acid and waste is no longer flushed out of body.
It goes straight into your blood stream poisoning your body and endangering your baby. I was literally bleeding acidic blood out of my pores. I was induced 36 weeks early because of how high my acidic levels were. They could not wait until week And when my daughter came out she was gray and not breathing. She was in the NICU for weeks. This information needs to be corrected. I am in shock. As someone who had Cholestasis during pregnancy. You have to deliver baby before 38 weeks or else you are at a high risk for a stillborn.
How many women are you giving this false information too? This needs to be taken down. Whoever wrote this, clearly has no idea about Cholestasis. Please do some research. Cholestasis of pregnancy is not a harmless condition.
It increases the risk of stillbirth and should be taken extremely serious. Topical medications actually do nothing for it. It's a liver condition that causes a dangerous rise in bile salts in the blood.
Therefore topical medications do absolutely nothing for it. If you are having intense itching it does warrant a prompt call to your physician. Round ligament pain usually starts between 18 and 24 weeks around when you start showing and typically occurs on one side of your belly, though it can strike both.
You may feel it as lower abdominal pain that radiates into the groin; it may be sharp and stabbing or dull and achy, and it usually lasts for just a few seconds. It can be triggered by any movement that causes these ligaments to stretch, like coughing, sneezing, laughing, or getting up suddenly.
Round ligament pain usually resolves on its own, but if you're extremely uncomfortable, ask your OB-GYN if you can take acetaminophen. Constipation and gas are often part of the pregnancy package, unfortunately. Progesterone, a hormone that increases during pregnancy, slows down your entire gastrointestinal tract, making foods travel more slowly through it.
To combat constipation, drink plenty of water and eat fiber-rich foods. If that doesn't relieve the problem, your midwife or ob-gyn may recommend a stool softener or a fiber supplement.
For a small number of expecting parents, serious pregnancy complications can develop that require immediate attention from your OB-GYN. Some red flags to watch for include bleeding, severe pain, fever, and visual disturbances. Ectopic or tubal pregnancies—in which the egg implants someplace other than the uterus, most often in the fallopian tube—occur in one out of every 50 pregnancies, according to the March of Dimes.
If you have an ectopic pregnancy , you may experience intense pain and bleeding between your sixth and tenth weeks of pregnancy, as the tube becomes distended. The following factors increase the risk of ectopic pregnancy: previous pelvic, abdominal, or fallopian tube surgery; endometriosis; previous ectopic pregnancy; tubal ligation; having an intrauterine device IUD in place at the time of conception; or a pelvic infection.
An abnormally shaped uterus and the use of artificial reproductive techniques also seem to increase the risk.
Ectopic pregnancies can't continue and require immediate treatment. If you had a positive pregnancy test but haven't yet had your pregnancy confirmed by a medical exam, and you experience abdominal pain, you should be evaluated immediately by your OB-GYN, says Linda Chambliss, M.
Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center in Phoenix. Your OB-GYN or midwife can perform an ultrasound to confirm whether the egg has implanted in the uterus.
When women experience abdominal pain during early pregnancy, "you always have to be concerned about miscarriage," says Dr. Duff, because the unfortunate fact is that 15 to 20 percent of pregnancies end in miscarriage. Symptoms of miscarriage include bleeding and cramping that can be rhythmic or resemble menstrual cramps. If you're experiencing regular contractions before you're 37 weeks pregnant , and it's accompanied by persistent backache, you could be having preterm labor. The contractions might come with leaking vaginal fluid or blood or a decrease in fetal movement.
Even experienced pregnant women may not be able to tell if contractions are Braxton Hicks or true preterm labor, Dr. Chambliss says, so she asks her patients to call anytime they feel contractions.
You may end up being sent home because it's a false alarm Dr. Chambliss says this happens to about 30 percent of the women who show up in her triage unit , but it's better to be safe than sorry, especially in this case. Your placenta provides oxygen and nutrients to your baby.
It usually implants high on the uterine wall and doesn't detach until after your little one is born. In rare cases 1 out of every births , the placenta can separate from the uterine wall—a dangerous complication that's most common in the third trimester.
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