What is morning sickness?
Morning sickness can range from mild, occasional nausea to severe,
continuous, disabling nausea with bouts of vomiting. Symptoms may be worse in
the morning, though they can strike at any time of the day or night.
Although its cause is poorly understood, morning sickness has been
linked to increasing
estrogen levels, along with other hormone changes
during early pregnancy.2
- The first signs of morning sickness usually
develop during the month following the first missed menstrual period, when
hormone levels increase.
- Women carrying twins or more have more
pronounced hormone increases and tend to have more severe morning
sickness.
There is no way of predicting how long your morning sickness will
last, even if you have suffered through it before. Nausea and vomiting usually
go away by 12 to 14 weeks of pregnancy. But in some cases, morning sickness can
last well into a pregnancy.
Test Your Knowledge
If your mother had morning sickness for half of her
pregnancy, you probably will, too.
- True
- False
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Why use home treatment for morning sickness?
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Managing morning sickness