Surgical management of miscarriage ensures complete removal of pregnancy tissue from the womb. Specialists offer experienced gynecological care and post-miscarriage support.
When ERPC is Needed
This procedure may be necessary when ultrasound confirms pregnancy loss but the body hasn’t begun natural miscarriage, when miscarriage is incomplete with retained tissue, when natural processes fail or are undesired, or when medical approaches prove ineffective.
Procedure Details
Patients receive general anesthesia before the 15-minute procedure. A speculum opens the vagina, the cervix is dilated, and specialized instruments carefully extract pregnancy tissue. Suction may assist in clearing remaining material.
Recovery Process
Patients experience drowsiness upon waking and may have cramping and bleeding. Hospital observation lasts at least two hours. Someone must arrange transportation due to anesthesia effects. Light activity resumes after one week, with normal routine resuming as tolerated.
Potential Risks
Complications include heavy bleeding, infection, uterine or cervical damage, incomplete tissue removal requiring repeat procedures, and allergic reactions to anesthesia. Though rare, specialists ensure patients understand these risks fully.
