I am currently 35 weeks pregnant with my second set of twins a boy and girl. I am having severe pelvic pain whenever I try to move from one side or the other laying down, when I'm sitting upright or when I go to get up to use the bathroom. I cant even lift my leg to get dressed because the pain is unbearable. Simply trying to move in bed is excruciating. And i keep getting a loud very painful "bone pop" in my pelvis. Its NOT improving just getting worse. Should delivery be considered or what?
×
4 Reasons Why Ask DoctorBase™ is the Most Efficient Way to SEO and Establish Your Brand Online
- Ask DoctorBase™ is a free service for patients on the DoctorBase platform - currently servicing over 6 million American patients of record.
- All answers submitted by healthcare professionals (you) are for entertainment purposes only and do not constitute doctor-patient relationships. All patients must agree to this before using Ask DoctorBase™.
- Our software and our Marketing Engineering staff review each answer and optimize your answers for keywords valuable to your specialty. It is a well kept secret that doctors (you) - not SEO consultants - are the ones who have the most valuable content prized by search engines. Ask DoctorBase™ "unlocks and optimizes" your content in the most efficient manner possible with today's technology.
- Finally, the doctor who provides the most popular answer - "the Featured Answer," gets an added benefit by allowing patients to write rave reviews about your expertise - reviews that are submitted to both Google and Google Local through our Preferred Data Provider relationship.
Ask Dr. Molly if you have questions or want a personal session on how to best use Ask DoctorBase™ for maximum marketing impact.
35 weeks second set of twins
If it were a singleton pregnancy, I would think of Braxton Hicks contractions (false contractions). But you are carrying twins. Don't waste your time by visiting an outpatient prenatal setting, You must be hospitalized ASAP in the high risk pregnancy unit, before the rupture of the amniotic sac, so a thorough labor plan will be developed for you. Based on the fetal monitor, the specialist will then decide whether they can prolong your pregnancy for two more weeks, or will induce(augment) labor. All is weighed for the risk/benefit ratio for you and for your babies. Good luck.
Based on ultrasound findings
and the maturity of the babies
the date of delivery will be
determined by your obstetrician.
and the maturity of the babies
the date of delivery will be
determined by your obstetrician.