Symptoms of fetal arrest at 10 weeks of pregnancy
summary
After pregnancy, the most fear is that the body has a variety of special circumstances, especially the development of the fetus is the most worrying thing for parents. Pregnant people prefer to be paranoid, for fear that there will be something wrong with the fetus. Is pregnant 10 weeks fetal stop symptom? Next, I'd like to share my views with you.
Symptoms of fetal arrest at 10 weeks of pregnancy
Some pregnant women will have vaginal bleeding symptoms, often have brown or dark red bloody leucorrhea, and some pregnant women with lower abdominal pain. Therefore, when pregnant women with vaginal bleeding or abdominal pain and other symptoms, it should be early medical treatment.
There are also some pregnant women with no symptoms of fetal arrest, which can only be found through B-ultrasound examination. The diagnostic criteria of B-ultrasound for fetal arrest were as follows: A. no gestational sac at 6 weeks of embryo development; b. Although there was gestational sac, it was deformed and shrunk; c. When the gestational sac was more than 4 cm, no fetal bud could be seen; d. The cephalic arm length of fetal bud was more than or equal to 1.5cm, but there was no fetal heart beat.
The early pregnancy reaction can be alleviated after embryo suspension, but the early pregnancy reaction itself will be different due to individual differences, so the early pregnancy reaction can not be used to judge the situation of embryo development. The majority of pregnant women have no obvious symptoms after fetal development stopped, and need to be diagnosed by hormone examination combined with early pregnancy ultrasound.
matters needing attention
The emergence of fetal dystocia has a huge impact on our lives. Once the patients have more than three months of symptoms before pregnancy, they must immediately go to the hospital for examination, and check the possibility of fetal dystocia one by one. Even if the patients have no symptoms, they should regularly go to the hospital for reexamination and timely remedy.