Why is late implantation bad




















At the time of implantation, the blood vessels in the wall of the uterus will be disrupted. Some women will experience bleeding when this happens.

The bleeding caused by implantation will always take place before your regular time of menstruation. If implantation occurs later than ten days, it is considered to be late implantation. Late implantation bleeding is similar to the bleeding that occurs when implantation has taken place during the normal implantation time frame.

This makes it difficult to tell whether or not the implantation has taken place on time or if it is late. The bleeding that takes place during implantation will be a light spotting or a very light flow. While research is still being done on how exactly late implantation might cause miscarriage, it has been noted that the risk is a lot higher the later implantation occurs.

While late implantation may have a very strong connection with having a miscarriage, it is not the only factor that causes it. Sometimes abnormalities in the chromosomes may also lead to miscarriage. The inability of the uterus to prepare the lining for implantation may result in miscarriage.

There have been times when the miscarriage occurs so early in the pregnancy that the mother had no idea she was even pregnant! If you have irregular periods and are not being able to conceive or have suffered a miscarriage, you must visit a doctor. Even those who have been experiencing implantation bleeding that seems heavier than normal with clotting also need to see a doctor immediately as it could be a sign of an early miscarriage.

Your doctor will not be able to tell you when your embryo will implant itself to your uterus walls, nor will she be able to say why it is happening. More research in this field needs to be done to provide exact answers to these questions.

Trying to find out if a miscarriage has occurred due to late implantation is also not possible at this time.

However, if you are suffering from another issue that could be causing difficulty in conceiving or resulting in miscarriage, your doctor will be able to help you identify and treat it. Remember nobody can estimate when the embryo will attach itself onto the uterine wall.

Thank you, this makes sense. I hope every month for a BFP, but after trying since June of and nothing - I try not to get my hopes up as much anymore.

I am in the same boat as you right now. AF is due on Tuesday. I miscarried in October but we have been trying now since Jan I know I feel like if I haven't gotten a BFP by like 8DPO it's not coming as well since it seems like so many ladies on here do, but if you go by this site's stats , that's actually very rare!

We just must see a high percentage on here and it makes us feel like that's the norm. Hope that helps to ease your mind a bit - you're not out yet! I feel like the other posters have the bfn covered pretty well, but I want to add that if you've been trying that long you should highly consider getting a referral to an RE if you're not already seeing one. Sometimes it is just literally bad luck, but an RE can help you determine that and if it is, maybe try some drugs to help a bit.

If there is something preventing it they can find it and in almost every case do something about it. Fingers crossed you get a bfp soon!! Oh and totally agreeing with trying, have you looked into a referral? Mine was a late implantation. Had a miscarriage last year because of it, and this current pregnancy luckily stuck despite spotting for over a week. Fertility friend with opk and temping tells me I implanted when period was pretty much due. Thanks folks, well AF showed her face - so I'm out.

So far we have cancelled out any issues with me - but hubby needs to get checked again. He was checked in and was all good then. He's been hard to convince to go, but I think he's finally agreed to do it. Log in or sign up to post a comment! Recent posts in Trying for a baby. All fertility tests are fine?! Thus, they said, "the uterus may be receptive to pregnancy only during a limited time-window, shutting out defective embryos that get there too late.

This would spare a mother the physiologic burden of supporting a non-viable embryo. The current report is based on the careful testing of daily urine samples from about North Carolina women. This relatively large study in normal, fertile women confirms more tentative data from two small reports in and Note: Content may be edited for style and length.

Science News. ScienceDaily, 11 June Retrieved November 8, from www. Researchers have identified a protein in mice that must be present in eggs Print Email Share.



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