How to manage your pregnancy-part45-The cause of pregnancy outside the womb
How does an extra pregnancy occur?
After fertilization, the pregnant egg travels to one of the fallopian tubes to reach the uterus. If the tube is damaged or blocked, the ovule moves to the uterus, and the egg is planted in the tube and continues to grow there. Because most pregnancies outside the womb occur in the fallopian tube, they often call it pregnancy. In very less common cases, the egg in the ovary, the cervix (cervix), is implanted directly in the abdomen or even in the wound of the caesarean section.
It is also possible that a fetus is naturally located in the womb of the individual and the other fetus in the tube or anywhere else. This heterotropic pregnancy is said to be very rare and occurring in one in every 4,000 pregnancies. If an out-of-uterus pregnancy is not diagnosed and treated, the fetus may grow to a degree where the fallopian tube is torn and causes pain and abdominal hemorrhage. This may permanently damage the tube or cause it to die, and if it causes a very severe bleeding that can not be immediately treated, it may even lead to a patient's death. That is why early diagnosis and subsequent treatment and treatment are very important.