Most patients with embryonic arrest will experience slight vaginal bleeding, followed by abdominal pain and subsequent spontaneous abortion. When fetal arrest occurs, most women will be very sad, but if not dealt with in a timely manner, it can cause harm to the body. So, why hasn't the tire come out after being stopped for two weeks?
Most patients with fetal arrest will experience a small amount of vaginal bleeding. At this time, it is only discovered through B-ultrasound at the hospital that it is fetal arrest. In this case, it is necessary to terminate the pregnancy as soon as possible. So under normal circumstances, fetal arrest requires a curettage surgery, which can only remove all the embryonic tissue and prevent it from flowing out on its own. The curettage surgery can reduce the patient's bleeding.
In the early stages of fetal development, there are generally no symptoms. But in the later stages, symptoms of vaginal bleeding and abdominal pain will gradually occur. After fetal death in utero, it can affect coagulation function and may lead to severe bleeding. Prenatal check ups should be done regularly. If abnormalities are found in the fetus or if the fetus dies in the uterus, it is necessary to promptly expel the dead fetus to avoid damaging the mother's health.
Under normal circumstances, dead embryonic tissue will detach from the decidua wall of the endometrium, and the blood sinuses at the detachment site will open, resulting in bleeding. So if the dead embryonic tissue of a patient with fetal arrest has not been peeled off from the endometrium and decidua, bleeding will not occur, so fetal arrest will not necessarily cause bleeding.