Miscarriage research?

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Does anyone out there do or support miscarriage and spontaneous abortion research? It’s something that’s been bothering me as a pro-life cause - I’ve known it to be fairly common but it seems to be something you never hear about.
 
Hmm. It’s an interesting question. What are you hoping they will research? Causes? Means of prevention?

Claire
 
Hmm. It’s an interesting question. What are you hoping they will research? Causes? Means of prevention?

Claire
Prevention. I was wondering because it’s a common complaint of the pro-choice movement: that we work against abortion but not on helping wanted pregnancies survive.
 
As a previous poster mentioned, NaPro Technology and the Pope Paul VI Institute (in Omaha) do quite a lot of research and treatment/prevention of recurrent miscarriage.

I’ve never actually heard that objection from a pro-choice person, actually. Usually I’ve just been accused of not caring about children once they are born… Sigh.
 
Prevention. I was wondering because it’s a common complaint of the pro-choice movement: that we work against abortion but not on helping wanted pregnancies survive.
Keep in mind that being pro-life has many places for many people doing many different types of work.

God calls us each to a different purpose - like the parts of other body.

Some people pray outside the abortion clinics.

Some people help at the Pregnancy Center.

Some people are called to adopt children.

Some people work in the health field with pregnant mothers - doctors, nurses, midwives.

Some people work in teaching mothers how to care for their bodies while pregnant.

Some people do research to know what a mother’s nutrition should be while pregnant.

Some people help with the Culture of Life by teaching Natural Family Planning.

There is a place for everyone in helping to carry on the Culture of Life.

Throughout each day, we are all called to be people of Life and to live that life. Yet, we all will not be carrying out each part of the whole picture.
 
This question reminds me of when I had my first miscarriage umpteen years ago. I had it at home and called the doctor’s office afterward. They told me to bring the “tissue” in so they could send it to the lab.

Several days later, I got a phone call. The caller said, “Hello, Mrs. Jones (not my real name), we have your lab results.” I got really excited, thinking that I might get a clue about what went wrong. Then the caller said, “Mrs. Jones, the lab report says that you were pregnant, and you had a miscarriage!” I think I just sat there in stunned silence, and I was tempted to say something like, “Oh, thank you for telling me. I WOULD NEVER HAVE GUESSED!”

This made me so angry that I remembered it for years afterward. Apparently, they did almost nothing when they had the lab test. I was hoping to find out if it was a boy or a girl or if something was obviously wrong with what they called the “tissue.”

I think this is a really valid question. When someone has a miscarriage these days, do they do any kind of a real test to figure out what might have gone wrong? I am really curious about this, too.
 
The majority of spontaneous miscarriages, whilst sad, actually happen for a good biological reason. I’ve had the privilege to study developmental biology but i’ve also had the displeasure of seeing many pictures, diagrams, specimens, etc of horrible deformities.

The reason most of these happen is that the deformities are so great (as in organs forming outside the body or not having a proper skull) that the growing life cannot simply survive.

I think we are a very long time off being able to fix these, especially since many of these problems start incredibly early with DNA abnormalities (which we all know come from the sperm and egg of the parents, so, obviously, these abnormalities are present from the very first second of conception). We’re definitely a very far way off manipulating DNA to cure diseases successfully as well.

Many times they are chromosomal abnormalities. We have all heard of downs syndrome or trisomy 21 (called this because there are 3 copies of the somatic [eg. non sex, x or y chromosome] 21). In the case of most other chromosomes, when we have 3 copies, it is fatal.
 
I think some, perhaps many, miscarriages are caused by various pollutions, such as hormone disrupting types, like pesticides and other chemicals found in household and personal care products. Also auto exhaust. These cause birth defects too.

Here is some info: ourstolenfuture.org/

The cosmetics industry is pretty much unregulated (the gov thinks our skin, our largest organ, is impermeable). Here is something to help in selecting safer cosmetics: ewg.org/skindeep
 
Yes, I’m sure this is all true. I have read that many miscarriages happen because the fetus isn’t developing properly because of a genetic defect. I’m sure that it also happens because of various chemicals that we ingest. But when a woman has a miscarriage in 2013, is it standard practice to do any tests at all to determine why she miscarried? There are so many genetic tests available these days that I think it would be a very easy to run a test on a miscarried fetus to see if it had extra chromosomes or even a fatal genetic disease.

Why is this important? Well, if a woman was told that she lost the baby because of a genetic defect, she would realize that the baby wasn’t meant to live and that it would have been impossible for that baby to survive.

If a woman doesn’t have that sort of information, then she will probably spend the rest of her life wondering if she exercised too hard or if she didn’t spend enough time resting in bed. She might even think that she caused the miscarriage by being too anxious and upset during the pregnancy, especially if the pregnancy was unplanned.
 
Yes, I’m sure this is all true. I have read that many miscarriages happen because the fetus isn’t developing properly because of a genetic defect. I’m sure that it also happens because of various chemicals that we ingest. But when a woman has a miscarriage in 2013, is it standard practice to do any tests at all to determine why she miscarried? There are so many genetic tests available these days that I think it would be a very easy to run a test on a miscarried fetus to see if it had extra chromosomes or even a fatal genetic disease.

Why is this important? Well, if a woman was told that she lost the baby because of a genetic defect, she would realize that the baby wasn’t meant to live and that it would have been impossible for that baby to survive.

If a woman doesn’t have that sort of information, then she will probably spend the rest of her life wondering if she exercised too hard or if she didn’t spend enough time resting in bed. She might even think that she caused the miscarriage by being too anxious and upset during the pregnancy, especially if the pregnancy was unplanned.
I agree, it is heart-wrenching for a mother to be blaming herself. Same for birth defects. I’ve been doing a project, involving my students, to collect stories about people harmed by contamination – in their neighborhoods or at work.

One issue came up – in a small area of the Brownsville,TX/Matamoras,Mexico towns around 1990 there were an unusually large number of children being born without brains (anencephaly), and no telling how many were miscarried. The condition is linked to lack of folic acid in the diets, so there was all sorts of hoopla about the mothers eating the wrong types of tortillas, etc. The good that came out of that is that the US now requires food to be fortified with folic acid.

But it also seems there are chemicals that block the absorption of folic acid and there was high pollution of that chemical in the small area with the cases. I believe it was benzene or ??, which was being heavily used in the factories on the Mexican side of the river, without any safeguards. (It is sort of ridiculous to blame mothers eating the wrong foods, when obviously they had the basically same diet of other mothers in the RGV.)

Then one of my students told me her child was born with anencephaly – but it was bec of some genetic defect she had and didn’t know about, one which blocked her from absorbing folic acid. (I also told her some chemical might also be involved.)

There are many other pollution issues in the Rio Grande Valley, as well, that have led to birth defects, still births (one year all births in that town were still births), and who knows how many miscarriages (I imagine there are miscarriages that even the mother may not know about): PCBs in a reservoir and canal system from which poor people get their fish, the factory that produced Agent Orange and several other highly toxic chemicals for decades that leached into the soil & surrounding low-income neighborhood and elementary school, run-off water (where children played in the effluents, etc), and some other pollution issues the EPA doesn’t even know about…yet.

Many pollutants linked to cancer also cause birth defects, and presumably miscarriages.

I think there needs to be a lot of research in this area, if it has not already been done. At least people can avoid some of the exposures.
 
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