Braxtom Hicks can also be a form of cramps. Medical jargon for this topic tends to be easier for women that have gone through the pregnancy process vs the everyday person that's not in the medical field. The article could be accused of using a click bait title, but it's like calling both a lemon and an orange citrus.
Braxton-Hicks contractions, also known as prodromal or false labor pains, are contractions of the uterus that typically are not felt until the second or third trimester of the pregnancy. Braxton-Hicks contractions are the body's way of preparing for true labor, but they do not indicate that labor has begun.
I don't know I found it's easier just to call it one word. Instead of making click bait. I know nothing about it. Not my business. Have heard of it. But labor is associated with child birth.
It's called different things depending on the circumstances. Excluding situations like the article a woman doesn't have Braxtom Hicks monthly. Although I've had some that reminded me of them!
I thought false pregnancy was covered there, as well as period pains? Oops should bring up another set of definitions. Yes, more often, cramping is STDs or UTIs. But a lot more can also be pregnancy blockers causing false pregnancies or causing cramping pains. Of course the medical classification in that link has synonymous words of individual medical conditions. But the heading is still vaginal cramps
This article's heading tries to be painfully unique, because of the rare occurrence of its particular medical condition, affecting very rare numbers, so it sensationalised it. Instead of it heading, vaginal cramps, affecting almost every other woman. Simply for the editorial. Sales.
Yawn and yawn.
Simply association instead of a tongue twister. Those absurd to pronounce conditions most cannot word. Easier just to associate with. Then the whole tea party starts a course of Latin.
Isn't it called vaginal cramps? Not labor?
Braxtom Hicks can also be a form of cramps. Medical jargon for this topic tends to be easier for women that have gone through the pregnancy process vs the everyday person that's not in the medical field. The article could be accused of using a click bait title, but it's like calling both a lemon and an orange citrus.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK470546/#:~:text=Braxton%2DHicks%20contractions%2C%20also%20known,indicate%20that%20labor%20has%20begun.
I don't know I found it's easier just to call it one word. Instead of making click bait. I know nothing about it. Not my business. Have heard of it. But labor is associated with child birth.
https://greatist.com/health/vaginal-cramps
Look surely it's on that list under a pseudonym. I meant a synonym.
It's called different things depending on the circumstances. Excluding situations like the article a woman doesn't have Braxtom Hicks monthly. Although I've had some that reminded me of them!
And your list happens to be ailments like stds.
I thought false pregnancy was covered there, as well as period pains? Oops should bring up another set of definitions. Yes, more often, cramping is STDs or UTIs. But a lot more can also be pregnancy blockers causing false pregnancies or causing cramping pains. Of course the medical classification in that link has synonymous words of individual medical conditions. But the heading is still vaginal cramps
This article's heading tries to be painfully unique, because of the rare occurrence of its particular medical condition, affecting very rare numbers, so it sensationalised it. Instead of it heading, vaginal cramps, affecting almost every other woman. Simply for the editorial. Sales.
Yawn and yawn.
Simply association instead of a tongue twister. Those absurd to pronounce conditions most cannot word. Easier just to associate with. Then the whole tea party starts a course of Latin.