
What is Recurrent Pregnancy Loss?
Many women struggle to conceive a baby. As many as 6 percent of married women aged 15 to 44 were considered infertile during a study carried out by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC.) In other cases women don’t have problems getting pregnant but are unable to carry a baby to term, miscarrying again and again, a condition known as recurrent pregnancy loss.
Repeated miscarriage or recurrent pregnancy loss is defined as having two or more miscarriages. Having a miscarriage is something that happens to a lot of women—about 25 percent of all recognized pregnancies result in miscarriage. But less than 5 percent of women experience two miscarriages in a row, and only one percent experience three or more, according to the American Society of Reproductive Medicine (ASRM.) Repeated miscarriage is a condition that may be treated by fertility specialists.

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