Quick answer
What is miscarriage?
Miscarriage is loss of pregnancy before 24 weeks — most common in first trimester, affecting about 1 in 8 confirmed pregnancies. Symptoms include vaginal bleeding and cramping — but bleeding in pregnancy is common and not always miscarriage. Early pregnancy unit assessment with scan confirms. Most miscarriages complete naturally; some need medical or surgical management. Emotional impact is significant — support available through GP and charities. Seek emergency care for heavy bleeding, severe pain, or fainting.
Miscarriage — early pregnancy loss
Miscarriage ( early pregnancy loss ) — death of embryo/fetus before 24 weeks (UK legal definition; viability threshold ~23–24 weeks).
~1 in 8 confirmed pregnancies — majority first trimester — devastating despite statistical commonness.
Symptoms
Common presentation:
- vaginal bleeding — red or brown
- cramping — period-like
- passing products of conception
Types:
- Threatened — bleeding, scan shows heartbeat — 50% continue
- Inevitable — cervix open, bleeding
- Incomplete — retained tissue — needs treatment
- Complete — all tissue passed
- Missed — no symptoms, scan shows no heartbeat
Always exclude ectopic
Bleeding + pain early pregnancy — ** ectopic until proven otherwise**
Shoulder tip pain, collapse — 999 — ruptured ectopic
Early pregnancy unit — TV scan, hCG serial if early
Causes
First trimester (~85%):
- random chromosomal error — aneuploidy — not inherited fault, not caused by stress
Later / recurrent:
- uterine septum, fibroids cavity
- cervical insufficiency — mid-trimester
- APS — antiphospholipid syndrome
- thyroid, diabetes
- infection — Listeriosis etc.
NOT caused by:
- moderate exercise
- sex
- work stress
- ** morning sickness tablets** (usual)
Management options
Expectant management:
- wait — complete in days to 2 weeks
- suitable if stable, early, patient choice
Medical management:
- misoprostol — vaginal/oral — 84% complete — pain/bleeding expected
Surgical:
- MVA (manual vacuum aspiration) — under GA or local
- if failed medical, infection, haemorrhage, patient preference
Anti-D immunoglobulin — Rhesus negative women — after certain events
After miscarriage
Physical:
- bleeding 1–2 weeks
- avoid tampons until settled — infection risk
- sex when comfortable — when bleeding stopped
Emotional:
- grief valid at any gestation
- Miscarriage Association, Tommy’s
- GP — counselling, time off work
- partner grief too
Trying again
Fertility returns quickly — 1 period often advised for LMP dating
Recurrence risk — ~20% after one loss — still 80% next live birth
Recurrent miscarriage clinic — ≥3 losses — often finds treatable cause
When emergency
- pad soaked hourly
- foul discharge, fever — incomplete + infection
- fainting, severe pain
Miscarriage is common medically, unique personally — early pregnancy unit same day for bleeding, compassion not “just try again” alone.
Common questions
- What are the signs of miscarriage?
- Vaginal bleeding — light to heavy — cramping lower abdominal pain, passing tissue or clots, loss of pregnancy symptoms sometimes. Some miscarriages discovered on scan without bleeding — missed miscarriage. Ectopic pregnancy causes similar early symptoms — must be excluded with scan.
- What causes miscarriage?
- Most first trimester losses due to random chromosomal abnormalities in embryo — not preventable. Less commonly — uterine abnormalities, antiphospholipid syndrome, thyroid disease, uncontrolled diabetes, infection. Advanced maternal/paternal age increases risk slightly. Previous miscarriage increases recurrence modestly.
- How is miscarriage managed?
- Expectant — wait for natural completion if safe. Medical — misoprostol tablets to expedite. Surgical — MVA/ERPC vacuum aspiration under anaesthesia — if incomplete, infected, or preferred. Early pregnancy unit advises best option. Rhesus negative women need anti-D injection after certain events.
- How long after miscarriage can I try again?
- Physically — ovulation can return within 2 to 4 weeks — many advise waiting one period for dating next pregnancy though evidence allows trying when emotionally ready. No proof waiting improves next outcome unless molar pregnancy or ectopic treatment.
- When is recurrent miscarriage investigated?
- After 3 consecutive miscarriages (2 in some clinics if maternal age over 40 or no live birth) — tests include antiphospholipid antibodies, thyroid, uterine cavity imaging (hysteroscopy/3D ultrasound), parental karyotypes selected cases, thrombophilia screen debated.