Blood accumulation in gestational sac usually disappears after one or two weeks, depending on the amount of blood accumulation. If the blood accumulation is large, it may take longer, possibly two or three weeks to disappear.
The causes of blood accumulation in gestational sac are generally threatened abortion, mainly due to lack of rest, excessive strenuous exercise, or sexual behavior during pregnancy. After discovering blood accumulation in gestational sac, active treatment for maintaining pregnancy should be carried out, and bed rest is required.
How long does blood accumulation in gestational sac usually take to disappear?
1. There is significant individual variation in whether or how long blood accumulation in gestational sac will disappear, generally around 1-3 weeks.
2. If there is abdominal pain after bleeding in gestational sac, it indicates threatened abortion. Threatened abortion is accompanied by abdominal pain and vaginal bleeding. If abdominal pain continues to worsen after medication or rest, and the drug effect is not ideal, with increasing vaginal bleeding, it suggests that threatened abortion may develop into inevitable abortion. The chance of this blood accumulation disappearing is also small, and some cases of inevitable abortion may lead to incomplete abortion or even complete abortion.
3. If blood accumulation in gestational sac gradually disappears after treatment for maintaining pregnancy or rest, and fetal bud and heartbeat are also observed, it indicates a positive development, and if a single viable fetus is displayed, observation can continue, and routine follow-up prenatal examination should be performed.