Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here- thank you so much for your replies everyone! It’s good to hear others experiences and that others have delivered at Sibley.
I especially appreciate the post on how to avoid bleeding. Some useful tips. I was diagnosed with two abdominal (one fetal echo) and one transvaginal ultrasound. And yes, it was an IVF pregnancy so that explains the higher risk of the complete previa. Fingers crossed it does move, but trying to be prepared for other scenarios.
If you do have a bleed, don’t blame yourself. All of my bleeds with a partial Previa happened when I was completely inactive (sitting on couch, sleeping, etc).
Anonymous wrote:OP here- thank you so much for your replies everyone! It’s good to hear others experiences and that others have delivered at Sibley.
I especially appreciate the post on how to avoid bleeding. Some useful tips. I was diagnosed with two abdominal (one fetal echo) and one transvaginal ultrasound. And yes, it was an IVF pregnancy so that explains the higher risk of the complete previa. Fingers crossed it does move, but trying to be prepared for other scenarios.
Anonymous wrote:I’m pretty sure that the people saying it resolved has partial precise not complete. A lot of non-specialists misdiagnose a partial as a complete. According to what the high-risk specialist told me, a complete can only be diagnosed properly through a transvaginal ultrasound and only after 20-something weeks (can’t remember the cutoff). If you really only have a partial, you probably don’t really need to take as many of the precautions as I outlined above. Partials are very common and generally are not a big deal. Completes are very rare (although the specialist told me they were somewhat more common for IVF patients, in his experience).