top of page

Acerca de

Abortion Procedures

Hospital Corridor
Pregnancy is divided into three trimesters. The first trimester lasts through the 12th week. The second trimester begins at week 13 and continues through week 24. The third trimester is the remaining time until the foetus is delivered. For each trimester specific methods of abortion are used.
​

In the ACT, the specific procedures used may vary from the descriptions below.

​

Abortions in the first trimester

​

First trimester: Suction

​

In this method, the doctor must first paralyse the cervical muscle ring (womb opening) and then stretch it open. This is difficult because it is hard or “green” and not ready to open. The doctor then inserts a hollow plastic tube, which has a knife-like edge on the tip, into the uterus. The suction tears the body of the fetus into pieces. The doctor then cuts the deeply rooted placenta from the inner wall of the uterus.

​

The scraps are sucked out into a bottle. The suction is 29 times more powerful than a home vacuum cleaner. Great care must be taken to prevent the uterus from being punctured during this procedure, which may cause hemorrhage and necessitate further surgery. Also, an infection can easily develop if any fetal or placental tissue is left behind in the uterus. This is the most frequent post-abortion physical complication.

​

First trimester: Dilation & Curettage (D&C)

​

This is similar to the suction procedure except that the cervix is dilated or stretched to permit the insertion of a curette, a loop-shaped steel knife, up into the uterus. With this, the doctor cuts the placenta and fetus into pieces and scrapes them out into a basin. Bleeding is usually profuse.

​

Blood loss from D & C, or “mechanical” curettage is greater than for suction aspiration, as is the likelihood of uterine perforation and infection. This method should not be confused with routine D&Cs done for reasons other than undesired pregnancy (to treat abnormal uterine bleeding, dysmenorrhea, etc.)

​

Abortions in the second trimester

​

Second trimester: Prostaglandin

​

Prostaglandins are naturally produced chemical compounds which normally assist in the birthing process. In the ’70s and ’80s, prostaglandin drugs were used to induce premature labour and delivery. The injection of concentrations of artificial prostaglandins prematurely into the amniotic sac induces labor and the birth of a foetus usually too young to survive.

​

Often salt or another toxin is first injected to ensure that the foetus will be delivered dead since some fetuses have survived the trauma of a prostaglandin birth and been born alive.

​

Second trimester: Dilation & Evacuation (D&E)

​

The D&E or Dilatation & Evacuation method was developed and largely replaced saline and prostaglandin abortions. It involves the live dismemberment of the foetus and piecemeal removal from below. Used to abort through to 24 weeks, this method is similar to the D&C.

​

The difference is that forceps with sharp metal jaws are used to grasp parts of the developing fetus, which are then twisted and torn away. A pliers-like instrument is used because the bones of the fetus are calcified, as is the skull. There is no anaesthetic for the fetus. The doctor inserts the instrument up into the uterus, seizes a leg or other part of the body, and, with a twisting motion, tears it from the body of the foetus.

​

This is repeated again and again. The spine must be snapped, and the skull crushed to remove them. The nurse’s job is to reassemble the body parts to be sure that all are removed. If not carefully removed, sharp edges of the bones may cause cervical laceration. Bleeding from the procedure may be profuse.

​

Second trimester: Other Methods

​

Intracardiac injections. Since the advent of fertility drugs, multi-fetal pregnancies have become common. Since these are usually born prematurely and some have other problems, a new method has been developed.

​

At about 4 months a needle is inserted through the mother’s abdomen, into the chest and heart of one of the foetuses and a poison is injected to kill the fetus. This is “pregnancy reduction.” It is done to reduce the number or to kill a handicapped foetus, if such is identified. If successful, the dead body of the foetus is absorbed.

​

Abortions in the third trimester

 

Third trimester: Hysterotomy

​

Incisions are made in the abdomen and uterus and the fetus, placenta, and amniotic sac are removed.

 

RU486/Mifepristone/Mifegyne/Early Medical Abortion

​

The ‘Early Medical Abortion’ (as it is sometimes termed by the Australian abortion industry) is a method of chemical abortion that is sometimes used up to 9 weeks.

​

There are different drugs which can be used:

  • Prostaglandin alone

  • Methotrexate plus prostaglandin

  • Mifepristone plus prostaglandin

​

Mifepristone plus prostaglandin is the combination that is sometime used in Australia.

​

The procedure

The procedure will usually consist of the patient taking one Mifepristone tablet containing 200mg of mifepristone. This acts by blocking the effects of progesterone, a hormone which is needed for pregnancy to continue.

​

This will be followed 24-48 hrs later by the insertion into the vagina of four tablets each containing 200µg of Misoprostol. This is a different type of hormone (a prostaglandin) that helps to expel the fetus/embryo – usually, the foetus/embryo is passed that day. In some cases, the doses of both drugs may be changed by the doctor.

​

A second dose may be given if the woman has not passed the fetus within 4 hours time.

Image by Maria Oswalt
bottom of page