Pregnancy And Baby Care
Pregnancy Miscarriage
Miscarriage Fever
Fever - A Rare Cause and Sign of Miscarriages
When a pregnancy ends before 20 weeks, it is termed as a miscarriage. During a miscarriage, the placenta and fluid sac also get expelled from the uterus along with the fetus.
There are several causes for a miscarriage and there are various occasions when the cause for a miscarriage remains unknown.
Miscarriages occur in about 15 percent of all pregnancies. However, a miscarriage doesn't automatically imply that you cannot have a healthy pregnancy in the future.
read more...
Related Articles
Pregnancy And Baby Care Questions
Continued...
Most often miscarriages are spontaneous, i.e. the fetus doesn't develop like it should or the placenta is not attached properly. There are times when a miscarriage is inevitable, but the expulsion of the placenta and fetus is not complete. At such times, doctors prescribe medication to expedite the process.
Fever and Miscarriage
When a woman is pregnant, she has to maintain optimum health and as far as possible, avoid all kinds of infection, including the common flu. While a regular flu is not dangerous, high fever can be fatal. Fever, in excess of 101 degrees Fahrenheit, especially if it lasts for more than a day or so, could affect the fetus. While it is rare, it could even lead to a miscarriage.
Fever During Miscarriage
While high fever can at times cause a miscarriage, it is just as likely, that a miscarriage could result in a woman running a temperature.
Therefore, during pregnancy, if you get the chills or a fever, it is important to consult a doctor as soon as possible to ensure that the fever is not a miscarriage symptom.
Also, after or during a miscarriage, high fever could also be a sign of uterine infection. In fact, there are several women who have a uterine infection after a miscarriage and it is characterized with high fever and chills, bleeding, cramping, and foul smelling discharge.
Fever is also sometimes a physiological reaction of a woman's upheaval post a miscarriage. Dealing with a miscarriage can be difficult, particularly for women who were looking forward to the pregnancy. In such a scenario, women tend to feel under the weather or depressed after a miscarriage, and at times, even run a temperature.
Bottom line, whether you are pregnant or you have miscarried, fever is not something to be taken lightly. For one thing, when you are pregnant, apart from the danger to the fetus, there is the added complication of not being able to take antibiotics as these too can have a harmful effect on the fetus. Also, as mentioned above, after a miscarriage or during one, fever is generally a sign of an infection and it needs to be detected and treated as early as possible to negate the possibility of lasting damage.