Hoping to conceive 6 years after ectopic, but terrified.

I had an ectopic that when misdiagnosed about 6 years ago. It wasnt until after it burst that it was diagnosed and I was rushed into emergency surgery, I lost my right tube. I have since gotten married to an amazing guy, and I really want a baby. To top off my stress, I developed endomitreosis from the scar tissue from my surgery and Most of the women in my family have had atleast one ectopic.

Im so scared of another ectopic, but I really want to become a mother.

Is there anything I can do to lower the risks of another ectopic?

Dear Kayia,

It is normal to feel anxious about the future. We experience a mix of emotions from wanting to try again to being petrified of what may lie ahead. We never forget but we can learn to accept what happened. It is a slow process that might be weeks or months ahead. In time, we can get to a place where we feel comfortable trying again. When this is, is individual for each person. There is no timeframe for recovery, take each day as it comes.

Importantly early scans avail. As soon as you know you are pregnant, contact your local EPU to inform them and book in for an early scan at around six weeks. Remind them of your previous ectopic pregnancy. This self refer route is the best route in our view. Hopefully you will have some comfort to know you are under the radar of medical professionals right away.

I wish I could give more precise information, but as I do not have access to your and your partner’s medical records, it is difficult for me to provide specific details. Generally, we and many healthcare professionals advise keeping a healthy balanced diet, maintaining a healthy weight and abstaining from alcohol and smoking.

Importantly, help is available if conceiving naturally has not yet been successful after some time trying - and the EPT advises that women under 35 should seek medical advice following 12 months trying to conceive and those over 35 should seek advice after 6 months.

The chances of a further ectopic after a first in UK is 10%. So that’s 90% chance of the embryo being in right place next time.

While generally it is possible to conceive after an ectopic pregnancy, the amount of time it takes varies from couple to couple. Factors include age, general health, reproductive health and how often you have sex, among other things. It may be comforting to know that 65% of women are successfully pregnant within 18 months of experiencing an ectopic pregnancy and some studies suggest this rises to around 85% after two years.

Sending much love,

Karen x

The Ectopic Pregnancy Trust

Registered Charity Number: 1071811


If we have been able to help you, are you able to help us with a small donation or by volunteering?

Further information is available at ectopic.org.uk

Email us: ept@ectopic.org.uk

We provide a call-back helpline service: 020 7733 2653

The latest EPT newsletter is out now! You can take a look at the Winter edition and subscribe to our mailing list here: https://mailchi.mp/986bdd6091ee/ectopic-matters

Detailed medical information can be found on our website. Please remember online medical information is NO SUBSTITUTE for expert medical advice from your own health care team


Hello,

I as of late had an ectopic pregnancy in my left cylinder. Its been about a month since the shot and I am down to a hcg dimension of 4. Any individual who has experienced this and needed to get the max shots can relate, its awful. I am certain if there are any who had the medical procedure can relate too. Anyways…after my better half experienced this, he is extremely anxious to attempt again for an infant. I am terrified yet in addition need to get pregnant. Everything I can consider is imagined a scenario where it happens again…what on the off chance that I get pregnant in a similar cylinder and it stalls out again for sure if something isn’t right with me and the specialists didn’t recognize it. Simply insane arbitrary musings. It improves to hear success stories after an ectopic pregnancy in this gathering. Has anybody later had successful pregnancies or conveyances after an ectopic?

(Link removed per Trust policy)