It’s your final trimester. Almost there! Here are a few reminders of third trimester issues and some tried and true third trimester tips to help you cope with common pregnancy discomforts and trimester issues at the end of your pregnancy.
Medically reviewed by a board-certified OB/GYN
As your baby and uterus grow, your muscles stretch. This can put a strain on your back muscles and make backaches a painful third trimester symptom.
In preparation for childbirth, hormones cause the joints around your pelvis to loosen. It sounds worse than it is, but it may cause hip pain, usually on one side.
Hormonal changes in your joints help prepare your body for birth. But that pelvic pressure can press on nerves and blood vessels causing leg cramps. These cramps usually happen more at night or early in the morning. As your baby grows, changing circulation, increased swelling, dehydration, or water retention can make your leg cramps worse. Follow some of these tips to get relief during the third trimester.
Your growing baby can put pressure on your sciatic nerves which run from your lower back to your feet. This can cause tingling, numbness, or pain.
Swelling in your wrists or ankles comes from a rise in hormones. Although annoying, it’s a good thing since fluid retention can loosen your pelvic bones, preparing you for delivery. Retained water helps accommodate expanded blood volume and offsets water you'll lose during delivery.
Some third trimester issues are more serious than others. If swelling is more obvious in one leg, you may have a deep vein thrombophlebitis or a clot in your leg veins. Contact your doctor immediately if you see this.
Heartburn comes from stomach acid rising into your esophagus, or from the pressure of your baby and uterus on your stomach.
High hormone levels slow down your bowel muscles. Not to mention your baby’s now crowding your digestive system, which can result in constipation. Constipation can also lead to hemorrhoids.
The larger your uterus grows, the less room for everything else—bladder included. This makes bathroom visits more frequent. It can also cause leaking after you sneeze, cough, or laugh, which isn’t so funny, unfortunately.
It's baaaack! Exhaustion. Most likely due to the physical exertion of carrying all that extra weight around. Waking up for bathroom visits and comfort issues doesn’t help either.
Stomach size. Aches and pains. Trips to the bathroom. Baby kicks. The list for sleeplessness goes on and on.
Your baby may be pushing on a muscle under your lungs, decreasing your lung capacity. This may improve as your baby drops into your pelvis, but our third trimester tips can help, too.
As your skin stretches, it gets dry and itchy. You might get stretch marks on your breasts, stomach, and upper thighs. They're common third trimester issues, so you're not alone in these. While there are no proven treatments for stretch marks, they tend to fade after delivery.
Spidery or patchy-looking areas on your face, neck, arms, and chest tend to come from increased blood flow and changes in hormones. They often fade after pregnancy.
Though mainly hereditary, varicose veins are aggravated by pregnancy factors like weight gain, decreased blood circulation, and the weight of the baby in your pelvic region.
These are itchy, red, raised patches on your stomach, arms, and legs. This condition runs in families. The good news: it usually only happens with first pregnancies.
Hopefully this information about third trimester issues and these third trimester tips will help bring some comfort during the last part of your pregnancy. Now, ready for your big day?
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