I had very heavy bright red bleeding after a d&c for missed miscarriage at 9 weeks. The bleeding lasted for about 8 days following the d&c. Cramping was minimal, no clots passed. Just bright red blood. After a week of no bleeding, I had mild cramping followed by very dark red/brown/black bleeding for 3 days. I also am still experiencing mild pain/tenderness in different pelvic areas. I am 4 weeks post d&c. is this normal? Am I likely to develop asherman's syndrome from so much bleeding?
×
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.
D&C
Either the curettage was unsuccessful ( a tissue is left) or you contracted an infection and developed PID. You need to see a specialist ASAP and change the antibacterial treatment plan. Aminoglycosides (for the gram-negative flora) may be more helpful than Doxycycline. Also check for the clotting profile.
After the antibacterial treatment, a sonography would help establish or deny the risk of trophoblastic disease.
After the antibacterial treatment, a sonography would help establish or deny the risk of trophoblastic disease.