Treatment Overview
There is no treatment that can stop
a
miscarriage. As long as you do not have heavy blood
loss, fever, weakness, or other signs of infection, you can let a miscarriage
follow its own course. This can take several days.
If you have an
Rh-negative blood type, you will need a shot of
low-dose
Rhogam. This prevents
problems in future pregnancies. Your doctor can do a
blood test to see if you are Rh negative.
If a miscarriage is
causing intense pain or bleeding or is taking longer than you are comfortable
with, talk to your doctor about using medicine or surgery (such as a procedure
called
dilation and curettage, or D&C) to clear the
uterus.
An
obstetrician, a
family medicine doctor, or a
certified nurse-midwife can manage a
miscarriage.
Should I have medical, surgical, or no treatment to complete a miscarriage?
Threatened miscarriage
If you have vaginal
bleeding but tests suggest that your pregnancy is still progressing, your
doctor may recommend:
- Resting. You will be
advised to temporarily avoid sexual intercourse (pelvic rest) and heavy
activity. Your doctor may recommend bed rest. But most research shows that bed
rest does not prevent miscarriage.8
- Taking progesterone. You may be treated with the hormone
progesterone to help maintain the pregnancy. This treatment, though, may serve
only to delay a miscarriage and has not been proved effective for preventing a
miscarriage.9 (Progesterone has only shown promise for
preventing preterm birth later in a high-risk pregnancy.10)
- Avoiding NSAIDs. You will be advised
to avoid aspirin and other nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), such
as ibuprofen. Use only acetaminophen, such as Tylenol, for nonprescription pain
relief.
Incomplete miscarriage
Sometimes all or some of
the fetal tissue stays in the uterus after a pregnancy miscarries. This is
called an incomplete miscarriage (incomplete or missed spontaneous abortion).
If your doctor determines that you have had an incomplete miscarriage, you will
have one or more treatment options:
Should I have medical, surgical, or no treatment to complete a miscarriage?
Additional treatment concerns
If you are bleeding
heavily, you will be tested for
anemia and treated if necessary.
If your blood is
Rh-negative, you will need
Rh immune globulin (RhoGAM) after the miscarriage. This protects a future
pregnancy against
Rh sensitization. For more information, see the topic
Rh Sensitization During Pregnancy.
In very rare cases, removal
of the uterus (hysterectomy) is needed for women who have severe,
uncontrollable bleeding or a severe infection that is not cured with
antibiotics.
After a miscarriage
If you plan to become pregnant
again, check with your doctor. Most doctors and nurse-midwives recommend
waiting until you have had at least one normal
menstrual period before trying to become pregnant.
Your chances of having a successful pregnancy are good, even if
you've had one or two miscarriages.
If you have had three or more
miscarriages (recurrent miscarriage), your doctor may suggest further testing
to help find the cause. In up to 75% of couples who are tested, no obvious
cause is found for recurrent miscarriage. But studies have shown that up to 70%
of couples with unexplained recurrent miscarriages go on to have a baby without
treatment.7
What To Think About
Researchers suspect that a small
number of miscarriages are related to a woman's
immune system response against the pregnancy. But
experimental immunotherapies used to prevent this have no proven
benefit.11