English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I dont have any children, but have been pregnant twice before. Both pregnancies I decided to terminate. Now I am considering the Mirena IUD. On their website it says its good for women who have had at least one child. Does this eliminate me? Is it okay to use if you havent had any children?

2006-10-04 05:43:33 · 6 answers · asked by Roselyn 2 in Health Women's Health

6 answers

I was 17 when my Dr suggested Paraguard! However I choose not to bc I wanted to have another child in the far future! Didn't expect it that soon but at 19 I got my Mirena so they will give it to you at a young age!

Why do they prefer for you to have had children??

1. The uterus of a woman who has had at least 1 child is larger and will be more susceptible to a foreign object.

2. There is a small chance that you may become infertile (not that common but its a risk you face) at the time of removal however many women become pregnant within 2 months of removal but typically with in 6-12 months of removal

2006-10-04 15:15:12 · answer #1 · answered by Ƹ̵̡Ӝ̵̨̄Ʒ Mom2two Ƹ̵̡Ӝ̵̨̄Ʒ 7 · 0 0

An IUD is not really appropriate if you are young and plan to have children some day. Most IUD stay in place for several years, and many doctors will not agree to give you an IUD if you are still young and haven't had any children yet. I speak from personal experience. An IUD is a more permanent form of birth control - if you plan to have children someday, it could take years to become fertile again after using an IUD.

I would recommend that you look into using depo provera instead. It's an injection you receive every 12 weeks at the doctor's office. There's no way for you to get it wrong because the doctor or nurse gives you the injection. However, since it's only good for 3 months at a time, you can decide to stop at any time. Most women become fertile within a year after stopping the depo.

2006-10-04 06:51:59 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

I had the mirena IUD for about 3 years before I ever tried to get pregnant. I just talked to my Dr. and told her that I was worried about getting pg and that I don't want to have to worry about taking birth control pills regularly - who needs the responsibility?

Anyway, one of the best side-effects was that about 3 months after I got it, my period stopped! Because the IUD has hormones on it, it basically conviced the body that it was "pregnant" and I stopped ovulating. I was a little worried and when I told my Dr, she was excited... that's apparently how it's *supposed* to work. The good thing was that after I had it removed I got my period again in the next cycle, so there were no long term effects.

Also, it's comfortable, I never had any pain from it, it didn't interfere with intercourse or anything else. I say go for it. It really can't hurt. I think Dr's say to wait until after a baby because it is more of a "long term" solution than pills or shots.

2006-10-04 06:29:46 · answer #3 · answered by Cara M 4 · 0 0

I cherished the two Mirena and Paragard as thoughts for my IUD yet because of the fact insurance basically lined Paragard, that's what i ended up with. fairly, Mirena has hormones and Paragard would not. Mirena is solid for as much as 5 yrs i've got self assurance, and Paragard is solid for as much as ten yrs. i for my area think of the two are fairly comparable in how they paintings. i've got had my IUD for according to probability 2-4 wks now and it harm like heck whilst they placed it in. nicely extra like very uncomfortable.....and that i became into cramping for the 1st few hours even nonetheless it have been given much less and much less because of the fact the time surpassed. i did not bleed any better, some human beings say that they are bypass bigger dramatically. Others have suggested that their bypass dwindles all the way down to close to to not something.... the only draw back for my husband is as somebody else published, in specific circumstances for the time of intercourse he can sense the IUD. the 1st time he did he stopped in his tracks and in simple terms style of had this seem on his face. He suggested it became into like a pin prick and it wasn't very exciting. i think of the two Mirena and Paragard are equivalent....and all I had to pay became into $50 for the circulate to. And now i'm solid for 10 yrs, in simple terms circulate back each and every 6 months for a verify up. i admire not having to tension...nicely even nonetheless I continually situation anyhow :)

2016-10-15 12:32:48 · answer #4 · answered by sachiko 4 · 0 0

It is possible. Women who haven't had kids are more like to have it come out. Why I don't know. Look up IUD Divas there are many women on this site who have never had kids but have talked their Drs into inserting one for them. I wonder if having terminated your pregnancies makes it possible for you to get one. Your Dr or family planning clinic would be your best resource.

2006-10-04 06:04:36 · answer #5 · answered by JS 7 · 0 0

I've never used it, and I haven't had any kids but my doctor offered it to me since I was married and wasn't planning any. So I guess it's possible.

2006-10-04 05:48:34 · answer #6 · answered by Lisa P 4 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers