Intense Exercise During the First Two Trimesters of Unapparent Pregnancy

The Physician and sportsmedicine, 17(1), 87-94

DOI 10.1080/00913847.1989.11709684 PMID 27448004 Source

Abstract

In brief: Two runners who were not aware they had conceived continued their intense running regimens during the first and second trimesters of pregnancy. Both women assumed that their amenorrhea was due to endurance training. When their pregnancies were diagnosed, both women markedly reduced their training mileage during the third trimester because they feared that intense exercise might harm the fetus. Retrospective data were collected on their antenatal and intrapartum courses. Both women delivered healthy infants of normal weight. Although these two cases suggest that strenuous anaerobic exercise during pregnancy is not harmful, more studies are needed to determine if these cases are isolated.

Topics

intense exercise early pregnancy, running during pregnancy safety, strenuous exercise first trimester, anaerobic exercise pregnancy outcomes, athletic training pregnancy undiagnosed, endurance training amenorrhea pregnancy, exercise-associated amenorrhea conception, high intensity exercise fetal effects, pregnancy outcomes athlete runners, exercise induced amenorrhea pregnancy

Cite this article

Cohen, G. C., Prior, J. C., Vigna, Y., & Pride, S. M. (1989). Intense Exercise During the First Two Trimesters of Unapparent Pregnancy. *The Physician and sportsmedicine*, *17*(1), 87-94. https://doi.org/10.1080/00913847.1989.11709684

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