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How common is it to get pregnant after a miscarriage?

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How common is it to get pregnant after a miscarriage?
Miscarried on 12/29 at 5 weeks pregnant. I bled for 5 days, heavy the first 3. Similar to my regular periods, just heavier that first day. So I’m wondering if its common for people to get pregnant right after a miscarriage? I’m looking forward to possibly being pregnant again :) But I know it may not come as quickly as I’d like. Just curious about if anyone knows of this being common?

Best answer:

Answer by lillilou
I misscarried in mid-March, was pregnant again by May. Due in Feb.

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6 Comments

It depends on the person. If your body can take care of babies then you should be fine with getting pregnant in oh.. I’d say two months. Good luck! :)


This is pretty anecdotal information, but it seems common to get pregnant soon after a miscarriage, assuming there’s nothing wrong with your uterus structurally that causes a miscarriage to begin with. A moscarriage at 5 weeks is not that uncommon, so you’re probably ok. Just relax and keep trying- good luck!


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How Long After A Miscarriage Should I Wait Before Trying To Get Pregnant Again?
Your Body after a Miscarriage

A woman is ready for childbearing again after a miscarriage once the normal cycle returns. However, it is hard to predict when the next menstrual period will return after a miscarriage. Following uncomplicated miscarriage, most women who had regular cycles will have a period within four to six weeks following the completion of the miscarriage.

During pregnancy, your body produces a hormone called hCG, which suppress the pituitary gland’s production of other hormones that normally stimulate ovulation. The hCG level drops after the pregnancy tissue is removed during miscarriage. It must drop to zero before your cycles resume. Although the length of time it takes for this to occur depends predominantly on the value of hCG present before the miscarriage, hCG suppression of the pituitary gland usually subsides within two weeks.

If you had a spontaneous miscarriage without any prolonged bleeding, you will ovulate within two to four weeks after the miscarriage. Most miscarriages are complete, and if you did not have any infection symptoms (fever, discharge, excessive bleeding) after your pregnancy loss, it should not affect your attempts at becoming pregnant at all.

The return of your normal cycles, and hence your chances of pregnancy, depend a lot on how far along you were when the miscarriage took place. In addition, you might want to keep track of any instrumentation, such as curettage, that you might have been exposed to or if there were any retained products after the miscarriage. Rarely, a small amount of placental tissue is left behind at the time of miscarriage. In this case, a woman may experience persistent bleeding along with a delay in the fall of hCG levels and the return to normal cycles.
What can you do?

Most doctors recommend that you take your basal body temperature or do cervical mucus monitoring to find out your most fertile period of ovulation. If your periods have been fairly regular, you have been having regular unprotected intercourse and are not yet pregnant, then you must consult your doctor since in most cases, about 80 percent, couples having regular intercourse without birth control should conceive within a year.

You can seek help from an infertility specialist right away if you are contemplating getting pregnant. They can start you on a plan of observing cervical mucus, taking basal body temperatures and inducing ovulation if you are not ovulating on your own.

If you have had miscarriages before, it is important that you and your infertility expert try to determine the cause before you attempt to get pregnant again. Many women are discouraged after a miscarriage and rush to try again, without taking the necessary steps to avoid another miscarriage. Don’t try this in a hurry and suffer another pregnancy loss.


I had a miscarriage and got pregnant again (and a beautiful daughter out of it) 4 months later.


I had a miscarriage June 2007. I got pregnant again and had my daughter June 2008. So that means I got pregnant around 3 months after my miscarriage. This time frame may be different for you because it is not like we were just trying hard to have a baby (weren’t trying that hard not to have one, teh heh).


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