In pregnancy it increases risk of miscarriages, breech births, delivery complication, and low birth weight. |
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It's a tricky question to answer because we don't keep registries of miscarriages the way we keep birth defect registries and cancer registries. |
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Britain in 1954 was not barbaric towards its prisoners and miscarriages of justice were hardly common. |
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Multiple spontaneous miscarriages also may indicate underlying thrombogenic conditions. |
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The commission is an independent body set up in 1999 to consider alleged miscarriages of justice. |
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This solicitor's dedication and commitment to human rights and suspected miscarriages of law is tireless. |
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Such an analysis obscures the relation between miscarriages at different stages of gestation and maternal age. |
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They have undergone cycles of IVF, miscarriages and spent thousands of pounds in the pursuit of their aim, and plan to try again in the new year. |
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Doctors also argue that detailed autopsy of stillborn babies has allowed pathologists to identify viruses that can cause miscarriages. |
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Have infertility, miscarriages, stillbirths or infant deaths taken place in the family? |
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Forty six people have been admitted to hospital, with seven deaths and three miscarriages or stillbirths in pregnant women. |
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Some investigators have found statistical associations between induced abortion and subsequent miscarriages and ectopic pregnancies. |
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Smoking among women, especially during pregnancy can lead to miscarriages, premature birth, and low birth weight of infants. |
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Bacterial infections such as those caused by listeria or Group B Strep are a recognised cause of some stillbirths and late miscarriages. |
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The same outbreak also resulted in at least 10,000 miscarriages and stillbirths. |
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However, most miscarriages occur when a pregnancy is not developing normally. |
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The baby's mother had caught rubella and when pregnant mums get rubella the results are abortions, miscarriages, stillbirths, and birth defects. |
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It is crucial that opinion must at all times be accurate and evidence based if miscarriages of justice are to be avoided. |
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Legends of living death seem perfectly suited to these spiritual miscarriages. |
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As yet the optimal management for women with spontaneous miscarriages is unclear. |
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Official procedures are necessary to safeguard against miscarriages of justice, of course. |
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Our justice system, under-funded and under pressure, is weighted towards miscarriages. |
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Her longing to reassert control over her body deepened after a series of stillbirths and miscarriages left her with only one healthy child, Elma. |
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A grantee also is studying how the viruses that cause genital warts may affect the developing placenta and contribute to miscarriages. |
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They were found to have presided over miscarriages of justice that led to wrongful imprisonments. |
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In many parts of the Western world there is a strong preference among gynaecologists to rely on surgical evacuation for the management of miscarriages in the first trimester. |
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Approximately 1 percent of women experience recurrent miscarriage, which is defined as three consecutive miscarriages of pregnancies conceived with the same partner. |
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As the waiting time for getting a legally induced abortion is short, we believe that the number of spontaneous miscarriages while waiting for an abortion is low. |
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In addition, endemic diseases, such as yaws, and epidemic diseases, such as measles and smallpox, may have increased the incidence of stillbirths and miscarriages. |
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Secondary infertility is when you've had one or more babies in the past but can't conceive again, or if you've had one or more miscarriages or stillborn babies. |
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Families have a specific incentive to report miscarriages, stillbirths, and infant deaths to the family planning system as this leads to authorisation for a new pregnancy. |
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Termination of pregnancy or miscarriages that involve dilatation and curettage sometimes inadvertently remove myometrial tissue as well as removing the products of conception. |
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One of the longest-running musical miscarriages of justice will be righted when the York tenor behind a famous Christmas song is finally credited for his work. |
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Four students listed miscarriages as significant losses for them. |
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One woman who deeply regretted the abortion had four early miscarriages then carried two pregnancies to term and is alive 18 years after the first completed pregnancy. |
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In adults, lead overload can lead to miscarriages and birth defects, as well as sterility. |
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A history of termination of pregnancy, recurrent miscarriages, sexually transmitted infections, or sterilisation can all become a source of conflict. |
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Relatively new is the medical approach to spontaneous miscarriages. |
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Now the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission, who probe possible miscarriages of justice, have ordered Docherty's case to be re-examined. |
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After her three miscarriages, it seemed to be more and more unlikely that the queen would bear an heir. |
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In 1961, after four miscarriages in four years, Shirley Williams gave birth to their daughter, Rebecca. |
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Clapton and Boyd tried unsuccessfully to have children, even trying in vitro fertilisation in 1984, but were faced instead with miscarriages. |
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The wrongful conviction of the three men has been called one of the most egregious miscarriages of justice in recent times. |
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She suffered several miscarriages and they were informed that she would not be able to have children. |
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Premature births and stillbirths are generally not considered to be miscarriages although usage of these terms can sometimes overlap. |
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A listeriosis bacteria contamination of hot dogs and deli meats at the plant was linked to 15 deaths, six miscarriages and 79 illnesses. |
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Hopefully, Angela can support Donna and they can work together to call to account those people responsible for such miscarriages of justice. |
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The SCCRC is the Scottish body which reviews alleged miscarriages of justice and has the power to refer a case back before senior judges. |
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The top barrister helped free Gerry Conlon and three others after one of the worst miscarriages of justice in British history. |
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When people are executed by the dozen, it means that such miscarriages of justice are virtually certain to be occurring. |
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Thyroid disease is the most common endocrine condition affecting women of reproductive age and is associated with infertility and miscarriages. |
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Medics have uncovered that women who suer from recurrent miscarriages may be less able to regulate clock genes in the lining of the womb. |
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The goody-goodies argue about miscarriages of justice, but I would argue in all wars against evil, sadly some innocents have to die. |
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He had a new diagnostic tool, the fetoscope, but did not know how often its use might cause miscarriages. |
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She had 3 miscarriages and an extrauterine pregnancy within 2 years, and the titers that were found indicate that she was acutely infected weeks before the first miscarriage. |
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Besides, most of these designes were abortive, or aborsive rather, like those untimely miscarriages not honoured with a soul or the shape and lineaments of an infant. |
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The test will look for the presence of natural killer cells in the lining of the womb, which recent research has indicated could be a cause of repeat miscarriages. |
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His case came before the appeal judges after it was referred by the Criminal Cases Review Commission, the independent body which investigates possible miscarriages of justice. |
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While forensic science is all the rage on US television, since the advent and refinement of forensic science in the 1990s, miscarriages of justice have become more prominent. |
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Some saw it as upsetting to women who had suffered miscarriages. |
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Losses, miscarriages, and disappointments are monitory and instructive. |
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The clergy union argued that the penalty was unfair to victims of hypothetical miscarriages of criminal justice, because the ecclesiastical penalty is considered irreversible. |
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The findings suggest that smoking cannabis may lead to miscarriages or ectopic pregnancies, caused by embryos developing outside the womb in the fallopian tube. |
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