The New Zealand Herald

Spotlight on types of miscarriag­e

- Kathryn van Beek

It happens all the time but we hardly ever talk about it. About one in four pregnancie­s end in miscarriag­e, leaving many couples struggling with unresolved grief and social isolation. In this 10-part video-based online series, made by Digital Alchemist and funded by NZ On Air, we break down the myths and provide practical help. We hear from well-known NZ personalit­ies — The Hits host and te reo advocate Stacey Morrison, TVNZ presenter and journalist Miriama Kamo and funeral director Kaiora Tipene from The Casketeers — about their personal experience­s and follow the stories of six couples who have been through the trauma of miscarriag­e

Having a miscarriag­e is sometimes described as being like “having a heavy period”. But for many people, the experience is more complicate­d than that.

“There are three different types of miscarriag­e that can happen,” says Dr Cathy Stephenson. “There are missed miscarriag­es, there are incomplete miscarriag­es, and there are complete miscarriag­es.

“A complete miscarriag­e is if you know you’ve got a pregnancy and you then sadly experience bleeding, some cramps, you may notice that you pass tissue, and then the bleeding and the cramps stop.

“An incomplete miscarriag­e is when you get bleeding and cramps, and some of the tissue will be passed, but not all of it. The bleeding and the pain may not stop, and you need to go and see a doctor, and there are certain things they can do to help the miscarriag­e finish.

“And then there’s what’s called a missed miscarriag­e, when there’s nothing in terms of bleeding or pain at all. You will only realise that the miscarriag­e has happened when you go to a doctor and get either a scan or a blood test that shows that you’re no longer pregnant.”

Bereaved parent Hilaire Cornelius had a missed miscarriag­e. “I had absolutely no symptoms to tell me that I had miscarried,” she says. “We found out at the 13-week scan that the baby had passed away.”

Different medical terms get used to describe different types of pregnancy loss. For example, the term chemical pregnancy is used to describe very early miscarriag­e.

An embryonic pregnancy, also known as blighted ovum, is when the gestationa­l sac develops without the foetus. The placenta and the fluid develop but the baby doesn’t, explains Hilary Liddell, founder of the Recurrent Miscarriag­e Clinic at National Women’s Hospital.

A molar pregnancy is one in which pregnancy tissue grows rapidly. You have strong pregnancy symptoms, but the pregnancy is not continuing as a normal pregnancy, says Dr Karaponi Okesene-Gafa. The woman feels very unwell.

Another cause of early foetal loss is ectopic pregnancy, when a pregnancy develops outside the womb.

The term recurrent miscarriag­e applies to people who have had three miscarriag­es in a row with the same partner. Recurrent miscarriag­e is relatively rare, and people who experience it can talk to their GP to access specialist testing for both partners, and to discuss possible treatments.

Watch all the episodes at nzherald. co.nz/Misconcept­ionsNZ — a new episode will be added each day from Monday to Friday, ending on July 3.

 ??  ?? Hilaire Cornelius, here with Simon McLeod, says she had no symptoms when she had her miscarriag­e.
Hilaire Cornelius, here with Simon McLeod, says she had no symptoms when she had her miscarriag­e.

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