|
Viewing Single Post From: Thursday, November 8th Daily Discussion
|
|
restless daze
|
Nov 8 2012, 11:12 PM
|
Now don't come whoopin' my ass at the grocery store cause I picked on your fav on here!
- Posts:
- 1,605
- Group:
- Elite Member
- Member
- #4,831
- Joined:
- June 24, 2009
- Favorite Current Daytime Soap Opera
- I have given up hope. All my favorites are ruined
- Favorite Soap Opera of All Time
- DOOL, closely followed by YnR- but neither is worth my time now.
- Favorite Primetime Soap Opera of All Time
- Falcon Crest
- Current Soap Rankings
- Soap Rankings? Right.
- Twitter ID
- @JenniferDelp2
- Facebook ID
- Jennifer Delp Maletkovic
|
- rfsexton
- Nov 7 2012, 06:34 PM
Hmmm....Placental abruption, which includes any amount of placental separation before delivery, occurs in about 1 out of 150 deliveries. The severe form, which can cause the baby to die, occurs only in about 1 out of 800 to 1,600 deliveries.
Symptoms Abdominal pain Back pain Frequent uterine contractions Uterine contractions with no relaxation in between Vaginal bleeding
She had NONE of these....
Complications
Excess blood loss may lead to shock and possible death in the mother or baby. If bleeding occurs after the delivery and blood loss cannot be controlled in other ways, the mother may need a hysterectomy (removal of the uterus).
Sounds like the writers need a research assistant I had placental abruption and had NO symptoms and my child nearly died. She was born with an apgar of 1, dead babies have 0, perfect babies are ten. Only thing was she barely had a heartbeat. No muscle tone, gray color, no crying/breathing etc.
It does happen. Just not often. They took her a week early due to loss of amniotic fluid, they had no idea my placenta had abrupted, the abruption was positioned so there was no bleeding until birth. i passed clots bigger than footballs, and it was VERY BAD for me too.
|
|
|