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Miscarriage risks are those circumstances, conditions, and substances that increase the risk of miscarriage. Some risks are modifiable and can be changed. Other risks cannot be modified and can't be changed. Risks can be firmly tied to miscarriages and others are still under investigation.
High doses of caffeine intake during pregnancy may increase the risk of miscarriage [49] and some major negative pregnancy outcomes, such as stillbirth or low birth weight. [ 50 ] [ 51 ] A 2020 review called into question the safe levels proposed by the European Food Safety Authority, the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists ...
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The risk of miscarriage is not likely decreased by discontinuing SSRIs before pregnancy. [75] Some available data suggest that there is a small increased risk of miscarriage for women taking any antidepressant, [76] [77] though this risk becomes less statistically significant when excluding studies of poor quality. [74] [78]
"Women working night shifts are exposed to light at night which disrupts their circadian rhythm and decreases the release of melatonin," lead author Dr. Luise Molenberg Begtrup explained in an email.
A 2011 review found that caffeine during pregnancy does not appear to increase the risk of congenital malformations, miscarriage or growth retardation even when consumed in moderate to high amounts. [82]
Caffeine does not give you energy, just delays fatigue for a little while longer.” In other words, that 2 p.m. cup of coffee is just delaying the inevitable. At first, caffeine might appear to ...
A large 2024 study, [21] involving close to two hundred thousand participants using the UK Biobank, indicated that a habitual caffeine intake, at moderate levels of 200 mg - 300 mg of caffeine per day "was associated with a lower risk of new-onset CM [Cardiometabolic multimorbidity] and could play important roles in almost all transition phases ...