Pregnancy
11 articles in this category.
Miscarriage Risk by Week: A Data-Driven Breakdown
See exactly how miscarriage risk changes from week 4 through week 16, with figures drawn from large obstetric cohort studies and explained in plain language.
Read moreMiscarriage After Seeing a Heartbeat: What the Research Says
A confirmed fetal heartbeat cuts miscarriage risk by roughly 60%. Here is what the research shows about risk after cardiac activity is detected, and what it means for your pregnancy.
Read moreHow Maternal Age Affects Miscarriage Risk at Every Stage
Maternal age is the strongest modifiable predictor of miscarriage risk. This guide explains the age multipliers from a landmark 634,000-pregnancy study and what they mean practically.
Read moreRecurrent Miscarriage: Causes, Testing, and What Comes Next
Recurrent pregnancy loss affects about 1% of couples. This guide covers the known causes, the standard diagnostic workup, and the prognosis after three or more losses.
Read moreEarly Pregnancy Symptoms vs Miscarriage Signs: What's Normal?
Spotting, cramping, and nausea changes can all happen in healthy pregnancies. This guide explains which symptoms are normal and which warrant a call to your provider.
Read moreManaging Anxiety in the First Trimester: What Helps and What Doesn't
First-trimester anxiety is nearly universal, especially after prior loss. This guide covers what the evidence shows about managing pregnancy anxiety — from practical strategies to when to seek support.
Read moreMiscarriage Statistics Explained: What "1 in 4" Really Means
You've heard that 1 in 4 pregnancies end in miscarriage. But what does that figure actually include, and why does it matter less than your week-specific risk? This guide unpacks the numbers.
Read moreTrying Again After a Miscarriage: Timing, Risk Factors, and What to Expect
Most couples can try again after one cycle following a miscarriage. This guide covers optimal timing, how prior loss affects future risk, and what to expect emotionally and clinically in a subsequent pregnancy.
Read moreChemical Pregnancy vs. Miscarriage: What's the Difference?
A chemical pregnancy is a very early pregnancy loss, often before a missed period. This guide explains the clinical distinction, why it matters, and what it means for future pregnancies.
Read moreChromosomal Abnormalities and Miscarriage: The Most Common Cause
Chromosomal abnormalities cause 50–70% of first-trimester miscarriages. This guide explains what goes wrong, why it happens more often with age, and what it means for future pregnancies.
Read moreWhat Causes Miscarriage? A Plain-Language Medical Guide
Most miscarriages are caused by chromosomal errors, not by anything the pregnant person did. This guide covers all known causes, from the most common to the rare, with evidence-based explanations.
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