Jrepp
TTC #1 DH 30, Me 29
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- Sep 2, 2013
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Ibeach, I had the same thing with my loss in January. If you saved the tissue, you could take it to the lab to be tested. My doctor also said that sometimes instead of breaking up, the endemotrium sheds in clumps rather than breaking down to the blood we typically get.
I spoke with the doctor today and she said the sore/heavy chest and throat are to be expected from being under for over three hours. Apparently the longer you are under the more your chest and neck hurt. She said the tube a t the tip of my vagina is part of the catheter that came unwound and to do my best to push it back up. And she said the bleeding and pain are to be expected. They basically took out a large portion of my uterus so my body is kind of reacting to that.
Agh! Well, at least you have some answers. Do you feel more relieved knowing that they had explanations for your pain?
Yes and no. I'm glad there isn't cause for concern, but still scared and in pain. I was reading online that only 4-7% of the worlds female population has a uterine abnormality, and of those a complete septate uterus is the least common (I thought for sure a double uterus, bicornate, would be more rare than a septum). 75-80% of all anomalies are actually partial and actuate septums. The good news is, according to dr google, once the septum was removed our chances of miscarriage dropped from 95% down to 5%.