Is this Ectopic Pregnancy? Did I have a miscarriage? Am I still in danger?

I had missed period for 10 days and I thought I was pregnant I’m having left shoulder pain from the first day till now. I took a home pregnancy test and the first time it came faintly positive. Second time it came negative. Then I got very light brownish spotting for 3 days then I started my period and it is very heavy bleeding for continous 3 days still continuing. I’m having normal cramps like I always have when I get my normal period. normally I get light bleeding on the 1st day and 2 days heavy bleeding then again light bleeding for 1 day and then finish. Is this Ectopic Pregnancy? did I have a miscarriage? Am I still in danger?


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6 Responses for “Is this Ectopic Pregnancy? Did I have a miscarriage? Am I still in danger?”

  1. Angellove says:

    I would talk to your doctor and let them know everything you told us. They will find out if it was a miscarriage or if you have an eptopic.

  2. holeeycow says:

    Hello????? You are asking a bunch of idiots here, Go to your doctor.

  3. blonde_chick says:

    doctor. immediatly. dont take any chances you could save your baby if your pregnant

  4. Jenn <3 says:

    Go and see a doctor . they will chek you and then you will know what is wrong if ther is anything

  5. crissy 32 weeks 6 to go yipee says:

    my friend had an ectopic and she said you would know if you were having one because the pain is unbearable so go see your doctor

  6. anna says:

    Ectopic means “out of place.” In an ectopic pregnancy, a fertilized egg has implanted outside the uterus. The egg settles in the fallopian tubes in more than 95% of ectopic pregnancies. This is why ectopic pregnancies are commonly called “tubal pregnancies.” The egg can also implant in the ovary, abdomen, or the cervix, so you may see these referred to as cervical or abdominal pregnancies.

    The first warning signs of an ectopic pregnancy are often pain or vaginal bleeding. You might feel pain in your pelvis, abdomen, or, in extreme cases, even your shoulder or neck (if blood from a ruptured ectopic pregnancy builds up and irritates certain nerves). Most women describe the pain as sharp and stabbing. It may concentrate on one side of the pelvis and come and go or vary in intensity.

    A normal pregnancy is about 40 weeks. The loss of a pregnancy before 20 weeks is called early pregnancy loss. Often, the loss is a miscarriage (sometimes called spontaneous abortion by doctors). A rare form of pregnancy loss is molar pregnancy.
    The loss of a pregnancy—no matter how early—involves more than the loss of a fetus. For many women, miscarriage also results in feelings of loss and grief. This pamphlet explains: Some causes of early pregnancy loss
    Signs and symptoms of pregnancy loss
    What to expect after the loss

    Miscarriages occur in about 15–20% of pregnancies. Most occur in the first 13 weeks of pregnancy. Some miscarriages take place before a woman misses a menstrual period or is even aware that she is pregnant.

    The process of fertilization—in which the male sperm and the female egg join—is complex. Miscarriage can be caused by any one of a number of things before, during, or after this process. Often, this is nature’s way of ending a pregnancy in which the fetus was not growing as it should and would not have been able to survive.

    The cause of miscarriage often is not known. Most factors that cause a miscarriage are genetic. Sometimes a miscarriage is caused by the woman’s health problems.

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