Dr Dimple Doshi Logo
Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors

Recurrent Pregnancy Loss Treatment in Goregaon West, Mumbai: Evaluation & Planning

Author:

Dr. Dimple Doshi (MBBS, MD, DGO)
Lady Gynecologist & Laparoscopic Surgeon
27+ years’ experience
20,000+ surgeries completed

Repeated miscarriage can feel emotionally exhausting, especially when every pregnancy starts with hope and ends in uncertainty.
Many couples silently wonder whether the problem is genetic, hormonal, uterine, immune-related, or something hidden.
In my clinical experience, recurrent pregnancy loss needs careful evaluation, not blame or guesswork.
This guide explains causes, husband-wife karyotyping, products of conception testing, treatment options, and next pregnancy planning.

What Is Recurrent Pregnancy Loss?

Recurrent pregnancy loss means repeated pregnancy loss, usually two or more losses, needing structured evaluation before the next pregnancy.

Losing one pregnancy is painful.
Losing pregnancy again and again can feel emotionally devastating.

Many couples silently ask:

  • “Why is this happening to us?”
  • “Is there a hidden cause?”
  • “Can I carry a baby safely?”
  • “Should we try again or do tests first?”
  • “Is it a genetic problem?”
  • “Should husband and wife both be tested?”

Recurrent pregnancy loss, also called recurrent miscarriage, means repeated pregnancy losses before the pregnancy reaches viability.

Different guidelines use slightly different definitions. ASRM defines recurrent pregnancy loss as two or more failed clinical pregnancies, while RCOG defines recurrent miscarriage as three or more first-trimester miscarriages, with clinical discretion to evaluate after two losses when a pathological cause is suspected.

At Vardaan Hospital, Goregaon West, Mumbai, Dr. Dimple Doshi focuses on:

  • finding the possible cause,
  • correcting treatable factors,
  • avoiding unnecessary tests,
  • planning the next pregnancy safely,
  • and supporting couples emotionally.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Repeated miscarriage should never be treated as “bad luck” without review. A structured evaluation can identify treatable causes and guide a safer next pregnancy plan.

Recurrent pregnancy loss is also called recurrent miscarriage, repeated miscarriage, recurrent abortion, and recurrent spontaneous abortion.

Patients may search for the same condition using different words.

Common terms include:

  • Recurrent pregnancy loss
  • RPL
  • Recurrent miscarriage
  • Repeated miscarriage
  • Repeated pregnancy loss
  • Habitual abortion
  • Recurrent abortion
  • Recurrent spontaneous abortion
  • Early pregnancy loss
  • Repeated missed abortion
  • Repeated blighted ovum
  • Repeated fetal heartbeat loss
  • Second trimester pregnancy loss

Evaluation is usually advised after two or more losses, especially if maternal age is higher or the pattern suggests a treatable cause.

You should not be repeatedly told, “Just try again,” without a proper review.

Evaluation becomes important when there is:

  • two or more miscarriages,
  • pregnancy loss after fetal heartbeat was seen,
  • second trimester loss,
  • repeated missed abortions,
  • repeated blighted ovum,
  • repeated biochemical pregnancies with infertility,
  • miscarriage after IVF,
  • pregnancy loss with fetal growth restriction,
  • family history of genetic disease,
  • known uterine anomaly,
  • autoimmune disease,
  • thyroid disease,
  • diabetes,
  • history of thrombosis,
  • maternal age above 35 years,
  • or severe emotional distress after repeated losses.

RCOG’s 2023 guideline defines recurrent miscarriage as three or more first-trimester miscarriages, but clearly encourages clinicians to use discretion and consider evaluation after two miscarriages when a pathological rather than sporadic cause is suspected.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
If you have had two losses and feel anxious about trying again, it is reasonable to discuss evaluation rather than waiting for another loss.

Recurrent miscarriage may occur due to genetic, uterine, hormonal, immune, clotting, cervical, lifestyle, or unexplained causes.

Repeated miscarriage does not always mean one serious disease.

The common causes include:

1. Genetic or Chromosomal Causes

These may include:

  • random embryo chromosomal abnormality,
  • egg-related chromosomal error,
  • sperm-related chromosomal contribution,
  • parental balanced translocation,
  • Robertsonian translocation,
  • chromosomal inversion,
  • abnormal fetal karyotype.

2. Uterine or Structural Causes

These may include:

  • uterine septum,
  • submucous fibroid,
  • endometrial polyp,
  • intrauterine adhesions,
  • congenital uterine anomaly,
  • adenomyosis,
  • distorted uterine cavity.

3. Hormonal and Metabolic Causes

These may include:

  • thyroid disorder,
  • uncontrolled diabetes,
  • insulin resistance,
  • PCOS-related metabolic dysfunction,
  • obesity,
  • high prolactin if clinically relevant.

4. Antiphospholipid Syndrome

APS is an important treatable cause of recurrent miscarriage and placenta-related pregnancy complications.

5. Cervical Weakness

Cervical insufficiency may lead to:

  • painless cervical opening,
  • second trimester loss,
  • leaking,
  • bulging membranes,
  • recurrent preterm birth.

6. Lifestyle and Maternal Health Factors

These may include:

  • smoking,
  • alcohol,
  • uncontrolled weight,
  • uncontrolled diabetes,
  • poor nutrition,
  • severe anemia,
  • untreated medical illness.

7. Unexplained Recurrent Pregnancy Loss

Sometimes all tests are normal.

This does not mean there is no hope.
It means the next pregnancy needs:

  • early monitoring,
  • supportive care,
  • targeted medicines only when needed,
  • and careful follow-up.

Genetic evaluation may include testing miscarriage tissue, chromosomal microarray, husband-wife karyotyping, and genetic counselling.

Genetic causes are one of the most important areas in recurrent pregnancy loss evaluation.

Many early miscarriages occur because the embryo has an abnormal chromosome number and cannot continue development.

Genetic evaluation may be considered when there is:

  • repeated early miscarriage,
  • repeated missed abortion,
  • repeated blighted ovum,
  • fetal heartbeat loss,
  • abnormal fetus in previous pregnancy,
  • family history of chromosomal disease,
  • previous products of conception showing abnormality,
  • repeated IVF embryo abnormalities,
  • or repeated pregnancy loss without an obvious cause.

Genetic tests may include:

  • Products of conception karyotyping
  • Chromosomal microarray of miscarriage tissue
  • Husband karyotyping
  • Wife karyotyping
  • Parental peripheral blood karyotyping
  • Genetic counselling

ASRM’s older committee opinion recommended parental peripheral karyotyping to detect balanced structural chromosomal abnormalities and noted that balanced reciprocal and Robertsonian translocations are seen in about 2–5% of couples with recurrent miscarriage.

More recent guidance is more selective: ESHRE and RCOG recommend parental karyotyping after individual risk assessment or when pregnancy tissue testing shows an unbalanced structural chromosomal abnormality.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Genetic testing should be explained gently. It is not about blaming either partner — it is about understanding whether chromosomes are affecting embryo development.

Husband and wife karyotyping may be advised when repeated miscarriages suggest a possible balanced chromosomal rearrangement.

This section is very important for couples with recurrent pregnancy loss.

Both husband and wife may look completely healthy.
They may have no symptoms.
Their routine blood tests may be normal.

Still, one partner may rarely carry a balanced chromosomal rearrangement.

What does balanced translocation mean?

In a balanced translocation, genetic material is rearranged but not missing.

The carrier parent is usually normal because the total genetic material is balanced.

But during embryo formation, the baby may receive an unbalanced chromosome pattern.

This can lead to:

  • repeated early miscarriage,
  • repeated missed abortion,
  • blighted ovum,
  • fetal growth arrest,
  • abnormal fetal karyotype,
  • repeated IVF embryo abnormalities,
  • or recurrent pregnancy loss without another clear cause.

What chromosomal problems may be detected?

Husband-wife karyotyping can detect:

  • Balanced reciprocal translocation
  • Robertsonian translocation
  • Chromosomal inversion
  • Large structural rearrangements

When should both partners consider karyotyping?

Karyotyping of both husband and wife may be considered when:

  • there are repeated pregnancy losses,
  • products of conception show chromosomal abnormality,
  • miscarriage tissue shows unbalanced structural rearrangement,
  • there is family history of repeated miscarriage,
  • there is family history of birth defects,
  • previous baby had chromosomal abnormality,
  • IVF embryos repeatedly show abnormalities,
  • or the miscarriage pattern strongly suggests a genetic cause.

What happens if one partner’s karyotype is abnormal?

If either partner has a balanced chromosomal rearrangement, counselling may include:

  • natural conception with early monitoring,
  • recurrence risk discussion,
  • pregnancy tissue testing if miscarriage recurs,
  • prenatal diagnosis in pregnancy,
  • IVF with PGT-SR in selected cases,
  • donor gamete counselling in rare situations,
  • genetic counselling for family planning.

Suggested patient-friendly explanation

Husband-wife karyotyping does not mean anyone is “defective.” It simply checks whether a silent chromosome rearrangement is affecting embryo development.

This is a sensitive topic and should be explained gently.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
When karyotyping is advised, both partners should be counselled together. The aim is clarity, not blame.

Q1. Can adenomyosis be cured without surgery?

Ans. Yes, adenomyosis can be managed with non-surgical treatments like pain relievers, hormonal therapy (such as Mirena IUD or GnRH agonists), and medications to control heavy bleeding. However, in severe cases, surgery may be necessary.

Q2. Is adenomyosis the same as endometriosis?

Ans. No, adenomyosis and endometriosis are different conditions. Adenomyosis occurs when the uterine lining grows into the uterine muscle, while endometriosis happens when the uterine lining grows outside the uterus. However, both can cause severe menstrual pain and heavy bleeding.

Q3. What are the best treatment options for women who want to conceive?

Ans. For women who wish to have children, conservative treatments like hormonal therapy or uterus-sparing surgery (such as adenomyomectomy) may be recommended. A fertility specialist can guide the best approach.

Q4. How do I know if I need surgery for adenomyosis?

Ans. Surgery is usually recommended if symptoms are severe, persistent, and do not respond to medications. If fertility is not a concern, hysterectomy (removal of the uterus) may be the most effective long-term solution.

Q5. How long does recovery take after adenomyosis surgery?

Ans. Recovery depends on the type of surgery. Minimally invasive procedures like laparoscopic adenomyomectomy or microwave ablation may require 1-2 weeks, while hysterectomy may take 4-6 weeks for complete recovery.

Thyroid disease, uncontrolled diabetes, PCOS-related metabolic problems, and selected hormonal issues may increase miscarriage risk.

Hormonal and metabolic balance matters before conception and during early pregnancy.

Important factors include:

Thyroid Disorders

Uncontrolled thyroid disease can affect pregnancy outcomes.

Evaluation may include:

  • TSH,
  • thyroid antibodies in selected cases,
  • dose optimization before pregnancy.

Diabetes and Insulin Resistance

Poor sugar control may increase miscarriage and congenital anomaly risk.

Before pregnancy, evaluation may include:

  • fasting sugar,
  • post-meal sugar,
  • HbA1c,
  • weight and metabolic risk review.

PCOS

PCOS may be linked with:

  • irregular ovulation,
  • insulin resistance,
  • obesity in some women,
  • early pregnancy risk in selected patients.

Progesterone Support

Progesterone is not a universal answer for every recurrent miscarriage patient.

It may be useful in selected cases, especially when there is bleeding in early pregnancy and previous pregnancy losses, but it should be individualized rather than prescribed blindly.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Do not start thyroid medicines, diabetes medicines, progesterone, aspirin, or injections without a clear reason. Treatment should match the diagnosis.

Antiphospholipid syndrome is an autoimmune clotting condition that can cause recurrent miscarriage and placental complications.

APS is one of the most important treatable causes of recurrent pregnancy loss.

It may be suspected when there is:

  • recurrent early miscarriage,
  • fetal loss after 10 weeks,
  • severe preeclampsia,
  • fetal growth restriction,
  • placental insufficiency,
  • thrombosis history,
  • autoimmune disease history.

APS tests may include:

  • lupus anticoagulant,
  • anticardiolipin antibodies,
  • anti-beta-2 glycoprotein I antibodies.

These tests need proper interpretation and often repeat confirmation.

Treatment may include:

  • low-dose aspirin,
  • heparin or low molecular weight heparin,
  • high-risk pregnancy monitoring,
  • fetal growth surveillance,
  • blood pressure monitoring.

Blood thinners should not be started casually without a diagnosis.

RPL testing should be individualized and may include genetic, uterine, hormonal, autoimmune, metabolic, and cervical evaluation.

Every couple does not need every test.

A structured recurrent pregnancy loss workup may include:

1. Detailed History

  • Number of pregnancy losses
  • Gestational age at each loss
  • Whether fetal heartbeat was seen
  • Medical or surgical miscarriage management
  • D&C history
  • Histopathology report
  • Previous ultrasound reports
  • Previous genetic reports
  • Menstrual history
  • Ovulation history
  • Painful periods
  • Pain during intercourse
  • Family history
  • Thrombosis history
  • Autoimmune disease history

2. Genetic Evaluation

  • Products of conception karyotyping
  • Chromosomal microarray of miscarriage tissue
  • Husband karyotyping
  • Wife karyotyping
  • Parental peripheral blood karyotyping
  • Genetic counselling if abnormality is detected

3. Blood Tests

  • CBC
  • Blood group and Rh
  • TSH
  • HbA1c
  • Fasting and post-meal sugar if indicated
  • Prolactin if indicated
  • Vitamin D and B12 if clinically needed
  • Antiphospholipid antibody panel
  • Thyroid antibodies in selected cases

4. Uterus and Pelvis Evaluation

  • Pelvic ultrasound
  • 3D ultrasound when needed
  • Saline infusion sonography
  • Hysteroscopy
  • Laparoscopy if endometriosis, adhesions, or pelvic pathology is suspected

5. Cervical Evaluation

This is especially important if there is:

  • second trimester loss,
  • painless cervical opening,
  • leaking before pain,
  • bulging membranes,
  • history of preterm birth.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Please carry all old pregnancy reports, scan reports, discharge summaries, and histopathology reports. They often reveal important patterns.

Not every expensive test improves outcomes; recurrent miscarriage testing should be evidence-based and targeted.

Many couples are advised long test panels after miscarriage.

But more testing does not always mean better care.

Tests that may not be needed routinely include:

  • random infection panels without symptoms,
  • unvalidated immune panels,
  • natural killer cell testing without clear indication,
  • thrombophilia tests in every patient without risk factors,
  • repeated hormone panels without clinical reason,
  • empirical blood thinners without diagnosis,
  • repeated TORCH panels without indication.

The aim is not maximum testing.

The aim is correct testing.

Treatment depends on the cause and may include medical correction, surgery, APS treatment, genetic counselling, or close pregnancy monitoring.

There is no single tablet for all recurrent miscarriages.

Treatment is diagnosis-based.

If APS Is Confirmed

Treatment may include:

  • low-dose aspirin,
  • heparin or LMWH,
  • close pregnancy monitoring.

If Thyroid Disease Is Present

Treatment may include:

  • thyroid correction before pregnancy,
  • TSH monitoring during pregnancy,
  • dose adjustment when needed.

If Diabetes Is Uncontrolled

Treatment may include:

  • preconception sugar control,
  • HbA1c optimization,
  • diet planning,
  • medication review.

If Uterine Septum Is Present

Treatment may include:

  • hysteroscopic septum correction.

If Polyp or Submucous Fibroid Is Present

Treatment may include:

  • hysteroscopic polyp removal,
  • hysteroscopic fibroid removal in selected cases,
  • laparoscopic myomectomy when required.

If Cervical Insufficiency Is Suspected

Treatment may include:

  • cervical length monitoring,
  • progesterone where indicated,
  • cervical cerclage in selected cases.

If Husband or Wife Karyotype Is Abnormal

Treatment planning may include:

  • genetic counselling,
  • natural conception with risk counselling,
  • early pregnancy monitoring,
  • prenatal diagnosis,
  • IVF with PGT-SR in selected cases,
  • donor gamete counselling in rare cases.

If Cause Is Unexplained

Care may include:

  • early pregnancy support,
  • timely scans,
  • reassurance,
  • avoiding unnecessary medicines,
  • individualized progesterone use when indicated,
  • lifestyle optimization,
  • emotional support.

Repeated miscarriages need answers, not blame.
If you have had two or more pregnancy losses, a careful evaluation can identify treatable causes and help plan the next pregnancy safely.
Consult Dr. Dimple Doshi at Vardaan Hospital, Goregaon West, Mumbai for recurrent pregnancy loss evaluation.

The next pregnancy should be planned after reviewing previous losses, correcting treatable causes, and creating an early monitoring plan.

Before trying again, discuss:

  • Is the RPL evaluation complete?
  • Is thyroid controlled?
  • Is sugar controlled?
  • Is uterine cavity normal?
  • Is APS ruled out or treated?
  • Is cervical weakness suspected?
  • Is genetic testing needed?
  • Is husband-wife karyotyping needed?
  • Are supplements started?
  • What is the early pregnancy monitoring plan?

Preconception checklist

  • Start folic acid.
  • Correct anemia.
  • Optimize thyroid.
  • Control diabetes.
  • Review medicines.
  • Stop smoking and alcohol.
  • Manage weight.
  • Treat uterine cavity problems if present.
  • Consider genetic counselling when indicated.
  • Keep previous reports ready.
  • Plan early scan after conception.

After conception, early pregnancy should be monitored with timely beta-hCG, ultrasound, medicine review, and risk-specific care.

The early weeks after recurrent miscarriage are emotionally sensitive.

Many women feel fear instead of joy.

At Vardaan Hospital, the next pregnancy plan may include:

  • early consultation after missed period,
  • beta-hCG if clinically needed,
  • early ultrasound at the correct time,
  • confirmation of intrauterine pregnancy,
  • fetal heartbeat scan,
  • medicine review,
  • progesterone support if indicated,
  • aspirin or LMWH only if indicated,
  • BP and sugar monitoring,
  • cervical length monitoring if needed,
  • fetal growth monitoring later.

The goal is balanced care:

Not ignoring the history. Not overtreating without evidence.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
After recurrent losses, the next positive pregnancy test can bring fear. Early monitoring helps provide reassurance and timely care.

Surgery may be needed if recurrent miscarriage is linked to uterine septum, fibroid, polyp, adhesions, or selected pelvic disease.

Surgery is not needed for every recurrent pregnancy loss patient.

It may help when a correctable anatomical problem is found.

Hysteroscopy may be advised for:

  • uterine septum,
  • endometrial polyp,
  • submucous fibroid,
  • intrauterine adhesions,
  • suspected uterine cavity abnormality.

Laparoscopy may be advised for:

  • fibroid affecting fertility,
  • endometriosis,
  • pelvic adhesions,
  • ovarian cyst with fertility concern,
  • pelvic pathology not clear on imaging.

At Vardaan Hospital, Dr. Dimple Doshi’s gynecological and laparoscopic expertise helps in evaluating uterine and pelvic causes of recurrent miscarriage.

When surgery is required, minimally invasive techniques can help with:

  • better visualization,
  • smaller cuts,
  • faster recovery,
  • fertility-preserving planning,
  • early return to routine life.

The cost depends on consultation, ultrasound, blood tests, APS testing, genetic tests, hysteroscopy, laparoscopy, and treatment needed.

Every couple does not need every test.

Cost may include:

  • consultation,
  • pelvic ultrasound,
  • hormone tests,
  • diabetes and thyroid testing,
  • APS panel,
  • products of conception testing,
  • husband karyotyping,
  • wife karyotyping,
  • parental karyotyping,
  • genetic counselling,
  • hysteroscopy,
  • laparoscopy,
  • medicines,
  • early pregnancy monitoring.

Dr. Dimple Doshi offers experienced, ethical, diagnosis-based recurrent miscarriage evaluation and high-risk pregnancy planning in Mumbai.

Repeated miscarriage care needs more than a prescription.

It needs:

  • listening,
  • pattern recognition,
  • correct testing,
  • emotional sensitivity,
  • genetic counselling when needed,
  • and a clear next pregnancy plan.

Dr. Dimple Doshi brings:

  • 27+ years of experience
  • Expertise in gynecology and obstetrics
  • High-risk pregnancy care experience
  • Fertility-oriented evaluation
  • Recurrent miscarriage workup guidance
  • Husband-wife karyotyping guidance when indicated
  • Uterine cavity and pelvic pathology assessment
  • Hysteroscopic and laparoscopic surgical planning when needed
  • Ethical, evidence-based treatment
  • Continuity from preconception to pregnancy care

Treatment philosophy

Repeated miscarriage is not just a failed pregnancy. It is a signal to evaluate, support, and plan better for the next one.

Vardaan Hospital offers women-centered care for miscarriage evaluation, fertility planning, surgical correction, and pregnancy monitoring.

At Vardaan Hospital, couples receive:

  • detailed consultation,
  • ultrasound-based evaluation,
  • hormonal and metabolic workup,
  • miscarriage cause assessment,
  • uterine cavity evaluation,
  • genetic testing guidance,
  • karyotyping counselling,
  • minimally invasive gynecological surgery when needed,
  • high-risk pregnancy support,
  • emotional counselling,
  • convenient Goregaon West location,
  • continuity of care.

The focus is simple:

Find the cause where possible. Correct what is treatable. Support the next pregnancy carefully.

Vardaan Hospital is conveniently accessible for women from Goregaon West, Malad, Kandivali, Jogeshwari, Andheri, and nearby Mumbai suburbs.

Repeated miscarriage is not the mother’s fault; both partners may need evaluation, and many couples can still have a successful pregnancy.

The most important points are:

  • Do not blame yourself.
  • Do not keep trying repeatedly without review.
  • Keep all previous reports safely.
  • Both partners may need evaluation in selected cases.
  • Husband-wife karyotyping may be useful when genetic causes are suspected.
  • Treatable causes should be corrected before the next pregnancy.
  • Early monitoring in the next pregnancy can improve confidence and safety.

Dr. Dimple Doshi’s Tip:
Recurrent pregnancy loss care should be gentle, private, and practical. The goal is to understand the pattern and prepare better for the next pregnancy.

Q1. How many miscarriages are called recurrent pregnancy loss?

Ans. Many guidelines consider two or more pregnancy losses as recurrent pregnancy loss, while some define recurrent miscarriage as three or more losses.

In clinical practice, evaluation may begin after two losses if maternal age is higher, the pattern is concerning, or a treatable cause is suspected.

Q2. Should husband and wife both do karyotyping after recurrent miscarriage?

Ans. Husband-wife karyotyping may be advised in selected couples when repeated miscarriages suggest a possible balanced chromosomal rearrangement.

It is especially useful when miscarriage tissue shows an unbalanced chromosomal abnormality, there is family history, or repeated losses remain unexplained after basic evaluation.

Q3. What is parental karyotyping in recurrent pregnancy loss?

Ans. Parental karyotyping is a blood test for husband and wife that checks whether either partner carries a balanced chromosomal rearrangement.

A balanced rearrangement may not affect the parent’s health but can create embryos with unbalanced chromosomes, leading to repeated miscarriage.

Q4. What is products of conception karyotyping?

Ans. Products of conception karyotyping tests miscarriage tissue to check whether the pregnancy loss occurred due to a chromosomal abnormality in the embryo.

This can help decide whether further parental karyotyping or genetic counselling is needed.

Q5. Can I have a successful pregnancy after recurrent miscarriage?

Ans. Yes. Many women with recurrent miscarriage can have a successful pregnancy, especially when treatable causes are identified and managed.

A structured next pregnancy plan improves confidence and safety.

Q6. Is recurrent miscarriage always due to the mother?

Ans. No. Recurrent pregnancy loss may be due to embryo chromosomes, paternal or maternal chromosomal factors, uterine problems, hormones, APS, cervical weakness, or unexplained causes.

It is medically wrong and emotionally unfair to blame the mother.

Q7. Should I take aspirin after repeated miscarriage?

Ans. Aspirin should not be taken blindly after every miscarriage.

It may be useful in antiphospholipid syndrome or selected high-risk situations, but only after proper evaluation.

Q8. Is progesterone useful in recurrent pregnancy loss?

Ans. Progesterone may help selected women, especially those with previous losses and bleeding in early pregnancy, but it is not a universal treatment for all cases.

Treatment should be individualized.

Q9. Can fibroids cause recurrent miscarriage?

Ans. Yes, some fibroids can increase miscarriage risk, especially submucous fibroids or fibroids distorting the uterine cavity.

Not every fibroid causes miscarriage. Location matters more than size alone.

Q10. When can I try again after miscarriage?

Ans. Timing depends on physical recovery, emotional readiness, investigation status, and whether any treatment is pending.

After recurrent losses, it is better to plan the next pregnancy after a structured consultation.

Conclusion

Recurrent pregnancy loss is emotionally painful, but it should not be handled with blame, guesswork, or repeated blind treatment.
A careful evaluation can help identify genetic, uterine, hormonal, immune, metabolic, cervical, or unexplained causes.

In my clinical experience, couples feel more hopeful when they understand what can be tested, what can be treated, and how the next pregnancy can be monitored from the beginning.

At Vardaan Hospital, Goregaon West, Mumbai, Dr. Dimple Doshi provides structured recurrent miscarriage evaluation, husband-wife karyotyping guidance when needed, fertility-conscious gynecological care, and high-risk pregnancy planning.

Repeated miscarriages need answers, not blame.
If you have had two or more pregnancy losses, do not lose hope and do not keep trying without guidance.
Consult Dr. Dimple Doshi at Vardaan Hospital, Goregaon West, Mumbai for recurrent pregnancy loss evaluation and future pregnancy planning.

Chat on WhatsApp