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1305767 tn?1361192676

Could I have been pregnant and lost it during my regular period

I started my period today on schedule but it's not like my periods usually are. I'm having some bad cramps and back pain with this one and I've noticed some greyish brown bits with the blood and a few clots or really thick strings of blood. My husband and I don't use any type of birth control aside from the withdrawal method and it's been that way for many years but I've never had a time where I thought I was pregnant. If I were only like 2-3 weeks pregnant would I even see the miscarriage (as in bits of tissue and such)? I'm just wondering what these grey/brown bits are coming out.
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1305767 tn?1361192676
Wow thanks for the info.
Helpful - 0
1994832 tn?1484866272
Hiya, I believe you may of have a chemical prregnancy from what u describe, see info below:

A chemical pregnancy is like a cruel joke. You take an early pregnancy test around the time your period is due that shows a faint positive. Naturally, you get excited and start spreading the joyful news that you're expecting. Then, a few days later you get your period and the doctor says, "It was just a chemical pregnancy."

Meanwhile, you're left confused and possibly devastated. The term chemical pregnancy sounds like a false positive pregnancy test, as if you were not really pregnant at all. But the truth is that a chemical pregnancy was indeed a conception and is actually a very early miscarriage.
What Chemical Pregnancy Means:

The term chemical pregnancy means that the miscarriage happened at a point that a missed period and biochemical tests, such as an hCG blood test or a home pregnancy test (checking hCG in urine), were the only evidence that you were pregnant. The miscarriage happened before an ultrasound could have shown a gestational sac.

When the pregnancy develops to the point that ultrasound could confirm the existence of the pregnancy, the term becomes clinical pregnancy. Thus, a chemical pregnancy would be a miscarriage before the fifth week of gestation -- or within about week after your missed menstrual period.
Symptoms:

The primary symptom of chemical pregnancy would be if you begin to have vaginal bleeding shortly after having a positive pregnancy test. Blood tests reveal low hCG levels that are decreasing rather than increasing.
Causes:

Doctors believe that chemical pregnancies happen for the same reasons as most other miscarriages –- probably because of chromosomal abnormalities in the developing baby. It is hard to know for sure what causes these early miscarriages, however, because it is nearly impossible to retrieve any samples for chromosomal testing.
Frequency:

No one really knows how common chemical pregnancies are, but some researchers have theorized that as many as 70% of conceptions end in miscarriage. Women who are not actively trying to conceive and not closely watching their menstrual cycles may have chemical pregnancies and never know it; in other cases, chemical pregnancy could be a reason (but not the only possible reason) why a menstrual period arrives a few days late.
Physical Recovery:

Chemical pregnancies happen early enough that they have little effect on women’s bodies, and in many cases, they can be mistaken for a normal period that is a few days late (or even on time). One 2007 study found that the bleeding after a chemical pregnancy is sometimes even lighter than a woman’s usual menstrual period. The bleeding from a chemical pregnancy might be accompanied by more cramps than usual also, but recovery should be fairly swift.
Trying Again:

With a very early miscarriage, many doctors will say that it’s OK to go ahead and try again right away. Other doctors recommend waiting to try to get pregnant again as a standard answer after all miscarriages, no matter how early. Talk to your doctor about what is right for your specific situation.
Grieving a Chemical Pregnancy:

In many cases, chemical pregnancy might put you in a weird situation from a grieving perspective. Some women don’t feel very sad over chemical pregnancies, whereas others are completely devastated emotionally. People in your life might not recognize the validity of your loss, insisting that you are wrong to grieve because it happened too early for you to get attached to the pregnancy or that “it wasn’t a real baby.”

Regardless of what anyone says, a miscarriage is a miscarriage. You do not have to justify your grief or compare it to anyone else’s grief for it to be valid. A chemical pregnancy was still a pregnancy, and for many women, it’s still a loss of a baby and grief that will always they will carry for their entire lives.

It’s also OK to not be too sad about a very early miscarriage and to decide you just want to try again. Everyone reacts differently to the situation, and there is no single, right emotional response to chemical pregnancy.

If you do tend to grieve chemical pregnancies deeply, and you are actively trying to conceive, think about perhaps waiting to test each cycle until your period is actually late. This way, you do not necessarily have to know about very early miscarriages. Many doctors recommend against early pregnancy testing for this reason.

See websites:
http://www.pregnancycorner.com/loss/chemical-pregnancy.html

or:

http://www.justmommies.com/articles/chemical-pregnancy.shtml
Helpful - 0
Avatar universal
Well I just had a miscarriage last month...:( I was only 5 weeks and the dr ruled it as inevitable... They said 8o% of woman lose a child between 2 and 8 weeks and just think its a normal period. I didn't even have any pain this time.. However I did have the brown, creamy fluid before blood.. But my hubby and I are trying again. If you are ttc, I wish you the best.
Helpful - 0
Avatar universal
Well I just had a miscarriage last month...:( I was only 5 weeks and the dr ruled it as inevitable... They said 8o% of woman lose a child between 2 and 8 weeks and just think its a normal period. I didn't even have any pain this time.. However I did have the brown, creamy fluid before blood.. But my hubby and I are trying again. If you are ttc, I wish you the best.
Helpful - 0
2149304 tn?1447810962
Most likely heavy uterine lining tissue. My periods had that alot but that has aleays been normal for me.
Helpful - 0
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