{"id":85892,"date":"2026-01-07T05:22:08","date_gmt":"2026-01-07T04:22:08","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/heloa.app\/?p=85892"},"modified":"2026-01-07T05:22:08","modified_gmt":"2026-01-07T04:22:08","slug":"molar-pregnancy","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/heloa.app\/en-in\/blog\/pregnancy\/health\/molar-pregnancy","title":{"rendered":"Molar pregnancy: symptoms, treatment, recovery"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Hearing the words <strong>molar pregnancy<\/strong> can feel like the ground shifts. One day there is a positive test, the next there may be bleeding, intense nausea, and an ultrasound that raises new questions. Parents often think: &#8220;Did I do something wrong?&#8221;, &#8220;Will this affect my chances next time?&#8221;, &#8220;Why do I need blood tests again and again?&#8221; With a <strong>molar pregnancy<\/strong>, the focus is clear treatment plus disciplined follow-up\u2014because the abnormal placental tissue can, in a small number of cases, persist.<\/p> <h2 id=\"understandingmolarpregnancyandwhatitmeans\">Understanding molar pregnancy and what it means<\/h2> <h3 id=\"whatamolarpregnancyishydatidiformmole\">What a molar pregnancy is (hydatidiform mole)<\/h3> <p>A <strong>molar pregnancy<\/strong> (also called a <strong>hydatidiform mole<\/strong>) is an abnormal pregnancy caused by an error at fertilisation. Instead of forming a normal placenta (and a baby), trophoblast cells\u2014the cells that should build the placenta\u2014grow in an uncontrolled way. You may hear doctors call it <strong>trophoblastic disease<\/strong>, because it starts from trophoblastic tissue.<\/p> <p>In a <strong>molar pregnancy<\/strong>, the placental villi often swell with fluid (<strong>hydropic villi<\/strong>) and can resemble many tiny cyst-like vesicles. Most molar pregnancies are not cancer. Even so, some molar tissue can keep growing after removal, which is why careful hormone monitoring is part of standard care.<\/p> <h3 id=\"whythepregnancyisnotviable\">Why the pregnancy is not viable<\/h3> <p>The placenta is not just &#8220;support tissue&#8221;. It is the organ handling oxygen, nutrient transfer, and hormone production. When placental development is disorganised from the start, the pregnancy cannot progress normally.<\/p> <ul> <li><strong>Complete mole:<\/strong> no embryo develops.<\/li> <li><strong>Partial mole:<\/strong> an embryo may be seen, but it has a major chromosomal abnormality and is not viable.<\/li> <\/ul> <p>A pregnancy test is positive because this trophoblastic tissue produces <strong>hCG<\/strong>, often in high amounts.<\/p> <h3 id=\"molarpregnancyvsmiscarriageectopicpregnancyandblightedovum\">Molar pregnancy vs miscarriage, ectopic pregnancy, and blighted ovum<\/h3> <p>Early pregnancy problems can look similar at first\u2014spotting, cramps, a positive test\u2014yet the cause and follow-up differ.<\/p> <ul> <li><strong>Miscarriage:<\/strong> the pregnancy stops developing, often due to chromosomal issues, hCG usually stops rising and then falls.<\/li> <li><strong>Blighted ovum (anembryonic pregnancy):<\/strong> a sac forms, but no embryo develops.<\/li> <li><strong>Ectopic pregnancy:<\/strong> implantation outside the uterus (often the fallopian tube), can become an emergency.<\/li> <li><strong>Molar pregnancy:<\/strong> abnormal placental growth, hCG may be higher than expected, ultrasound may show a typical &#8220;molar&#8221; pattern.<\/li> <\/ul> <p>People sometimes say &#8220;a <strong>molar pregnancy<\/strong> is like a miscarriage.&#8221; What they usually mean is that the pregnancy is not viable and needs evacuation. The difference is follow-up: a <strong>molar pregnancy<\/strong> needs structured surveillance to confirm all abnormal tissue is gone.<\/p> <h3 id=\"howmolarpregnancyfitswithingestationaltrophoblasticdiseasegtd\">How molar pregnancy fits within gestational trophoblastic disease (GTD)<\/h3> <p>A <strong>molar pregnancy<\/strong> is part of <strong>gestational trophoblastic disease (GTD)<\/strong>.<\/p> <ul> <li>Hydatidiform moles (complete and partial) are considered premalignant.<\/li> <li>If tissue persists or spreads, it can become <strong>gestational trophoblastic neoplasia (GTN)<\/strong>, including invasive mole and, more rarely, choriocarcinoma.<\/li> <\/ul> <p>The reassuring point: GTD\/GTN are among the most treatable pregnancy-related conditions when follow-up is completed.<\/p> <h2 id=\"typesofmolarpregnancyandkeydifferences\">Types of molar pregnancy and key differences<\/h2> <h3 id=\"completemolarpregnancywhathappens\">Complete molar pregnancy: what happens<\/h3> <p>A complete mole forms when there is no normal embryo development at all. The uterus contains only abnormal placental tissue.<\/p> <h4 id=\"keycharacteristics\">Key characteristics<\/h4> <ul> <li>No embryo or normal fetal tissue.<\/li> <li>Villi become swollen and form multiple cystic spaces.<\/li> <\/ul> <h4 id=\"geneticsandmechanism\">Genetics and mechanism<\/h4> <p>Most complete moles are androgenetic diploidy\u2014often <strong>46,XX<\/strong> (sometimes <strong>46,XY<\/strong>). Typically, an &#8220;empty&#8221; egg (no maternal nuclear DNA) is fertilised by one sperm that duplicates its chromosomes, or by two sperm.<\/p> <h4 id=\"typicalhcglevelsandsymptoms\">Typical hCG levels and symptoms<\/h4> <p>Because trophoblastic tissue is highly active, hCG can be markedly elevated.<\/p> <p>Common symptoms:<\/p> <ul> <li>First-trimester bleeding (sometimes dark brown)<\/li> <li>Severe nausea\/vomiting (sometimes <strong>hyperemesis gravidarum<\/strong>)<\/li> <li>Uterus measuring larger than expected<\/li> <li>Pelvic heaviness or pressure<\/li> <\/ul> <p>Very high hCG can also cause:<\/p> <ul> <li>Thyroid-like symptoms (palpitations, heat intolerance, tremor)<\/li> <li><strong>Theca-lutein cysts<\/strong> (ovarian cysts driven by hormonal stimulation)<\/li> <\/ul> <h4 id=\"ultrasoundappearance\">Ultrasound appearance<\/h4> <p>A complete mole may show the classic &#8220;<strong>snowstorm appearance<\/strong>&#8221; or &#8220;cluster of grapes&#8221;\u2014an echogenic mass with multiple cystic spaces and no visible fetus.<\/p> <h3 id=\"partialmolarpregnancywhathappens\">Partial molar pregnancy: what happens<\/h3> <p>A partial mole happens when abnormal placental tissue grows alongside abnormal fetal tissue.<\/p> <h4 id=\"keycharacteristics-1\">Key characteristics<\/h4> <ul> <li>Fetal tissue or parts may be present.<\/li> <li>The fetus is not viable due to abnormal genetics.<\/li> <\/ul> <h4 id=\"geneticsandmechanism-1\">Genetics and mechanism<\/h4> <p>Most partial moles are <strong>triploidy<\/strong> with 69 chromosomes, often <strong>69,XXX<\/strong>, <strong>69,XXY<\/strong>, or <strong>69,XYY<\/strong>, typically due to two sperm fertilising one egg.<\/p> <h4 id=\"typicalhcglevelsandsymptoms-1\">Typical hCG levels and symptoms<\/h4> <p>hCG is elevated but usually not as high as in complete moles.<\/p> <p>Symptoms may resemble a missed miscarriage:<\/p> <ul> <li>Vaginal bleeding<\/li> <li>Mild to moderate nausea<\/li> <li>Uterus not enlarged<\/li> <\/ul> <h4 id=\"ultrasoundappearance-1\">Ultrasound appearance<\/h4> <p>Ultrasound may show an abnormal cystic placenta and sometimes fetal parts. The picture can be less classic than a complete mole, so confirmation by pathology after evacuation is often needed.<\/p> <h3 id=\"completevspartialriskofpersistentdisease\">Complete vs partial: risk of persistent disease<\/h3> <p>Complete moles carry a higher risk of persistent GTD\/GTN than partial moles.<\/p> <p>Figures often quoted:<\/p> <ul> <li>After <strong>complete mole:<\/strong> ~10\u201315%<\/li> <li>After <strong>partial mole:<\/strong> ~0.5\u20133%<\/li> <\/ul> <p>These differences can influence how long hCG monitoring is continued.<\/p> <h2 id=\"howcommonmolarpregnancyis\">How common molar pregnancy is<\/h2> <h3 id=\"incidenceandwhyratesvary\">Incidence and why rates vary<\/h3> <p>A <strong>molar pregnancy<\/strong> is uncommon. Rates vary by region and detection practices.<\/p> <p>Reported estimates include:<\/p> <ul> <li>Europe: ~1 in 1,000<\/li> <li>USA: ~1 in 2,000<\/li> <li>Some parts of Southeast Asia: higher reported rates<\/li> <\/ul> <p>Differences may reflect how early ultrasounds are done and how routinely tissue is sent for pathology.<\/p> <h3 id=\"recurrenceriskinafuturepregnancy\">Recurrence risk in a future pregnancy<\/h3> <p>After one <strong>molar pregnancy<\/strong>, recurrence risk is higher than average but still low\u2014often around 1\u20132%. This is why early ultrasound is commonly offered next time.<\/p> <h2 id=\"causesandriskfactors\">Causes and risk factors<\/h2> <h3 id=\"howamolarpregnancyforms\">How a molar pregnancy forms<\/h3> <p>A <strong>molar pregnancy<\/strong> results from an error during fertilisation and early cell division. It is not caused by food, travel, stress, lifting, or intercourse.<\/p> <h3 id=\"whygeneticsmattergenomicimprinting\">Why genetics matter (genomic imprinting)<\/h3> <p>Pregnancy tissues rely on balanced genetic contribution and &#8220;imprinting&#8221; signals from both parents. When that balance is disrupted, placental growth can dominate and embryo development fails.<\/p> <h3 id=\"riskfactors\">Risk factors<\/h3> <p>Better-established factors:<\/p> <ul> <li>Very young maternal age (extremes)<\/li> <li>Advanced maternal age<\/li> <li>Prior <strong>molar pregnancy<\/strong><\/li> <\/ul> <p>Nutritional links (like low folate or low carotene intake) have been explored in some populations, but they cannot reliably predict who will develop a mole.<\/p> <h3 id=\"raregeneticpredisposition\">Rare genetic predisposition<\/h3> <p>Rarely, recurrent moles can be linked to inherited variants affecting egg imprinting (e.g., <strong>NLRP7<\/strong>, <strong>KHDC3L<\/strong>). If there is a history of multiple moles, genetic counselling may be offered.<\/p> <h2 id=\"symptomsandwarningsigns\">Symptoms and warning signs<\/h2> <h3 id=\"sometimestherearenoclearsymptoms\">Sometimes there are no clear symptoms<\/h3> <p>Some cases are detected on early ultrasound before symptoms are prominent.<\/p> <h3 id=\"commonsymptoms\">Common symptoms<\/h3> <p>Often in the first trimester:<\/p> <ul> <li>Vaginal bleeding (brown spotting or heavier bleeding)<\/li> <li>Passing clots (not always)<\/li> <li>Pelvic pain\/cramping<\/li> <li>Pelvic pressure\/heaviness<\/li> <li>Nausea that feels unusually intense<\/li> <\/ul> <h3 id=\"signslinkedtoveryhighhcg\">Signs linked to very high hCG<\/h3> <p>Very high hCG can overstimulate the body:<\/p> <ul> <li>Severe vomiting<\/li> <li>Thyroid-like symptoms (fast heartbeat, sweating, tremor, anxiety, heat intolerance)<\/li> <\/ul> <h3 id=\"preeclampsiabefore20weeks\">Preeclampsia before 20 weeks<\/h3> <p>Preeclampsia is typically later in pregnancy. When high blood pressure and protein in urine appear before 20 weeks, complete <strong>molar pregnancy<\/strong> is one of the red flags clinicians consider.<\/p> <h3 id=\"whentoseekurgentcare\">When to seek urgent care<\/h3> <p>Seek urgent evaluation for:<\/p> <ul> <li>Heavy bleeding (soaking a pad in an hour), dizziness, fainting<\/li> <li>Severe or worsening abdominal\/pelvic pain<\/li> <li>Fever, chills, foul-smelling discharge<\/li> <li>Shortness of breath, chest pain, coughing blood<\/li> <li>Severe headache, vision changes, confusion<\/li> <\/ul> <h2 id=\"howmolarpregnancyisdiagnosed\">How molar pregnancy is diagnosed<\/h2> <h3 id=\"clinicalassessment\">Clinical assessment<\/h3> <p>Clinicians consider symptoms, uterine size vs dates, and overall stability (pulse, blood pressure).<\/p> <h3 id=\"quantitativebetahcg\">Quantitative beta-hCG<\/h3> <p>Blood <strong>beta-hCG<\/strong> helps clarify the picture:<\/p> <ul> <li>Levels may be much higher than expected (especially complete mole)<\/li> <li>After treatment, levels should fall to undetectable<\/li> <\/ul> <h3 id=\"ultrasound\">Ultrasound<\/h3> <ul> <li><strong>Complete mole:<\/strong> diffuse abnormal tissue with cystic spaces, often no fetus.<\/li> <li><strong>Partial mole:<\/strong> abnormal placenta \u00b1 fetal parts, can overlap with miscarriage.<\/li> <\/ul> <h3 id=\"confirmationafterevacuationpathology\">Confirmation after evacuation (pathology)<\/h3> <p>Diagnosis is confirmed on histopathology:<\/p> <ul> <li><strong>Complete mole:<\/strong> diffuse hydropic villi, marked trophoblastic proliferation, no fetal tissue, typically <strong>p57 negative<\/strong><\/li> <li><strong>Partial mole:<\/strong> focal changes, may include fetal tissue, typically <strong>p57 positive<\/strong>, triploidy common<\/li> <\/ul> <h3 id=\"additionaltests\">Additional tests<\/h3> <p>Depending on symptoms:<\/p> <ul> <li>CBC<\/li> <li>Blood type and Rh<\/li> <li>Thyroid function tests<\/li> <\/ul> <h2 id=\"treatmentoptionsformolarpregnancy\">Treatment options for molar pregnancy<\/h2> <h3 id=\"initialmanagement\">Initial management<\/h3> <p>Care focuses on safety:<\/p> <ul> <li>Managing bleeding and checking haemoglobin<\/li> <li>Treating dehydration and vomiting<\/li> <li>Addressing thyroid overstimulation if present<\/li> <\/ul> <h3 id=\"uterineevacuationsuctiondc\">Uterine evacuation (suction D&amp;C)<\/h3> <h4 id=\"whyitispreferred\">Why it is preferred<\/h4> <p>First-line treatment is suction evacuation (suction D&amp;C), typically under anaesthesia, sometimes with ultrasound guidance. It removes abnormal tissue and allows tissue to be sent for pathology.<\/p> <h4 id=\"possiblecomplications\">Possible complications<\/h4> <p>Uncommon, but can include:<\/p> <ul> <li>Heavy bleeding<\/li> <li>Infection<\/li> <li>Uterine perforation<\/li> <li>Retained tissue requiring repeat evacuation<\/li> <\/ul> <h4 id=\"recoveryandwhatstartsrightaway\">Recovery and what starts right away<\/h4> <p>After the procedure:<\/p> <ul> <li>Bleeding and cramping may last days to a couple of weeks<\/li> <li>Clear &#8220;when to call&#8221; instructions are given<\/li> <li>Beta-hCG follow-up begins soon, because the trend confirms clearance<\/li> <\/ul> <h3 id=\"hysterectomyinselectedsituations\">Hysterectomy in selected situations<\/h3> <p>A hysterectomy may be considered if future pregnancy is not desired, or if there is significant bleeding. Even then, hCG monitoring is still needed.<\/p> <h3 id=\"othercarearoundtreatment\">Other care around treatment<\/h3> <ul> <li><strong>Rh(D) immune globulin<\/strong> if Rh-negative<\/li> <li><strong>Histopathology<\/strong> (and sometimes genetic testing)<\/li> <\/ul> <h2 id=\"followupaftermolarpregnancyhcgmonitoring\">Follow-up after molar pregnancy (hCG monitoring)<\/h2> <h3 id=\"whyfollowupmatters\">Why follow-up matters<\/h3> <p>Follow-up is the safety net. Persistent tissue can continue to produce hCG and may invade the uterine wall or spread. Early detection leads to excellent outcomes.<\/p> <h3 id=\"howbetahcgmonitoringusuallyworks\">How beta-hCG monitoring usually works<\/h3> <p>Protocols vary, but commonly:<\/p> <ul> <li>Weekly beta-hCG until undetectable<\/li> <li>Then monthly monitoring for a set period<\/li> <\/ul> <p>Monitoring is often longer after a complete mole (often around 6 months after hCG normalises) and may be shorter after partial mole depending on protocol.<\/p> <h3 id=\"signsofpersistentdisease\">Signs of persistent disease<\/h3> <p>Patterns that raise concern:<\/p> <ul> <li>hCG plateaus<\/li> <li>hCG rises<\/li> <li>hCG remains positive beyond the expected timeframe<\/li> <\/ul> <h2 id=\"contraceptionduringsurveillance\">Contraception during surveillance<\/h2> <h3 id=\"whycontraceptionisadvised\">Why contraception is advised<\/h3> <p>A new pregnancy makes hCG rise again and can mask persistent disease. Temporary contraception avoids confusion.<\/p> <h3 id=\"options\">Options<\/h3> <p>Depending on your health and preference:<\/p> <ul> <li>Pills<\/li> <li>Condoms<\/li> <li>Implant<\/li> <li>IUD (some teams wait until uterine healing)<\/li> <\/ul> <h2 id=\"persistentdiseasegtnandtreatmentifneeded\">Persistent disease, GTN, and treatment if needed<\/h2> <h3 id=\"persistentgtd\">Persistent GTD<\/h3> <p>Persistent GTD means tissue remains after evacuation, usually detected through hCG trends.<\/p> <h3 id=\"gtn\">GTN<\/h3> <p><strong>GTN<\/strong> is diagnosed using hCG criteria and sometimes imaging.<\/p> <h3 id=\"treatmenthighlyeffective\">Treatment (highly effective)<\/h3> <p>Treatment depends on risk scoring:<\/p> <ul> <li>Low-risk: single-agent chemotherapy such as <strong>methotrexate<\/strong><\/li> <li>High-risk: multi-agent regimens such as <strong>EMA\/CO<\/strong> in specialist centres<\/li> <\/ul> <h2 id=\"futurefertilityandpregnancyaftermolarpregnancy\">Future fertility and pregnancy after molar pregnancy<\/h2> <h3 id=\"canyougetpregnantagain\">Can you get pregnant again?<\/h3> <p>Yes. Most parents have healthy pregnancies after a <strong>molar pregnancy<\/strong> once treatment and follow-up are complete.<\/p> <h3 id=\"whenitmaybesafetotryagain\">When it may be safe to try again<\/h3> <p>Many teams advise waiting until hCG is undetectable and surveillance is complete. If chemotherapy was needed, the waiting period is often longer. Your specialist will guide this.<\/p> <h3 id=\"whatchangesnexttime\">What changes next time<\/h3> <p>Early ultrasound is usually offered for reassurance, and some teams may check hCG after delivery.<\/p> <h2 id=\"livingwithandrecoveringfromamolarpregnancy\">Living with and recovering from a molar pregnancy<\/h2> <h3 id=\"physicalrecovery\">Physical recovery<\/h3> <p>It is common to have light to moderate bleeding, cramps, and fatigue. Follow your clinician\u2019s advice on resuming sex, tampons, exercise, and work.<\/p> <h3 id=\"emotionalrecovery\">Emotional recovery<\/h3> <p>A <strong>molar pregnancy<\/strong> can carry grief plus uncertainty because follow-up keeps going. Clear information helps: expected monitoring duration, what &#8220;clearance&#8221; means, and warning symptoms.<\/p> <p>If anxiety or sadness feels persistent, mental health support can make the waiting period easier.<\/p> <h2 id=\"retenir\">\u00c0 retenir<\/h2> <ul> <li>A <strong>molar pregnancy<\/strong> is an abnormal fertilisation where placental tissue grows in an uncontrolled way, the pregnancy is not viable.<\/li> <li>Two main types exist: complete (no embryo) and partial (often triploidy).<\/li> <li>Diagnosis uses ultrasound and <strong>beta-hCG<\/strong>, confirmed by pathology (often with <strong>p57<\/strong> testing).<\/li> <li>Treatment is usually suction D&amp;C followed by structured hCG monitoring.<\/li> <li>Contraception during follow-up avoids confusion with hCG interpretation.<\/li> <li>Persistent GTD\/GTN is highly treatable, often with excellent cure rates.<\/li> <li>Professionals can support you through follow-up and future pregnancy planning, and you can also download the <a href=\"https:\/\/app.adjust.com\/1g586ft8\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Heloa app<\/a> for personalised guidance and free child health questionnaires for children.<\/li> <\/ul> <p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/heloa.app\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/grossesse-molaire-in-article-image.jpg\" width=\"628\" alt=\"A supportive couple sitting on a sofa facing the ordeal of a molar pregnancy together.\" \/><\/p> <p>Further reading:<\/p> <ul> <li>Molar pregnancy &#8211; Symptoms and causes: https:\/\/www.mayoclinic.org\/diseases-conditions\/molar-pregnancy\/symptoms-causes\/syc-20375175<\/li> <li>Hydatidiform Mole &#8211; StatPearls &#8211; NCBI Bookshelf: https:\/\/www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov\/books\/NBK459155\/<\/li> <\/ul>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Learn molar pregnancy symptoms, treatment, and recovery, plus hCG follow-up and fertility outlook\u2014clear, parent-friendly guidance. Read now.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":4,"featured_media":84435,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"_kad_blocks_custom_css":"","_kad_blocks_head_custom_js":"","_kad_blocks_body_custom_js":"","_kad_blocks_footer_custom_js":"","_kad_post_transparent":"","_kad_post_title":"","_kad_post_layout":"","_kad_post_sidebar_id":"","_kad_post_content_style":"","_kad_post_vertical_padding":"","_kad_post_feature":"","_kad_post_feature_position":"","_kad_post_header":false,"_kad_post_footer":false,"_kad_post_classname":"","rank_math_title":"Molar pregnancy: symptoms, treatment, recovery & hcg follow-up","rank_math_description":"Learn molar pregnancy symptoms, treatment, and recovery, plus hCG follow-up and fertility outlook\u2014clear, parent-friendly guidance. Read now.","rank_math_focus_keyword":"molar pregnancy","rank_math_primary_category":867,"ilj_linkdefinition":["molar pregnancy","molar pregnancies","molar pregnancy{-1}symptoms","molar pregnancy{-1}treatment","molar pregnancy{-1}recovery","molar pregnancy{-1}follow{-1}up","molar pregnancy{-1}follow{-1}up","molar pregnancy{-1}scan","molar pregnancy{-1}ultrasound","molar pregnancy{-1}diagnosis","molar pregnancy{-1}hcg","molar pregnancy{-1}hCG","molar pregnancy{-1}hormone","molar pregnancy{-1}monitoring","complete{-1}molar pregnancy","partial{-1}molar pregnancy","hydatidiform mole","pregnancy{-1}mole","trophoblastic{-1}pregnancy","abnormal{-1}pregnancy"],"footnotes":""},"categories":[867,859],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-85892","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-health-pregnancy-2","category-pregnancy-en-in"],"acf":{"prestation_table":"","technical_table":"","nom_professionnel":"","numero_telephone":"","convention_cas":"","contrat_acces_aux_soins":"","sesam_vitale":"","coordonnees":"","adresse":"","profession":"","numero_rpps":"","profession_description":"","commune":"","departement":"","prenom":"","origine":"","date_fete":"","signification_etymologie":"","histoire_origine_prenom":"","personne_celebre":"","age_moyen":"","prenoms_derives":"","prenoms_composes":"","naissances_2024":"","genre":"","prenoms_taxonomy":"","region_stats":"","evolution_naissances":""},"taxonomy_info":{"category":[{"value":867,"label":"Health"},{"value":859,"label":"Pregnancy"}]},"featured_image_src_large":["https:\/\/heloa.app\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/grossesse-molaire-featured-image-1024x559.jpg",1024,559,true],"author_info":{"display_name":"Heloa","author_link":"https:\/\/heloa.app\/en-in\/author\/expert-heloa"},"comment_info":0,"category_info":[{"term_id":867,"name":"Health","slug":"health-pregnancy-2","term_group":0,"term_taxonomy_id":867,"taxonomy":"category","description":"","parent":859,"count":133,"filter":"raw","cat_ID":867,"category_count":133,"category_description":"","cat_name":"Health","category_nicename":"health-pregnancy-2","category_parent":859},{"term_id":859,"name":"Pregnancy","slug":"pregnancy-en-in","term_group":0,"term_taxonomy_id":859,"taxonomy":"category","description":"","parent":0,"count":224,"filter":"raw","cat_ID":859,"category_count":224,"category_description":"","cat_name":"Pregnancy","category_nicename":"pregnancy-en-in","category_parent":0}],"tag_info":false,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/heloa.app\/en-in\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/85892","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/heloa.app\/en-in\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/heloa.app\/en-in\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/heloa.app\/en-in\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/4"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/heloa.app\/en-in\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=85892"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/heloa.app\/en-in\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/85892\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":85893,"href":"https:\/\/heloa.app\/en-in\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/85892\/revisions\/85893"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/heloa.app\/en-in\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/84435"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/heloa.app\/en-in\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=85892"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/heloa.app\/en-in\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=85892"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/heloa.app\/en-in\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=85892"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}