Postpartum Bleeding: What is Normal?
Following a vaginal birth, it’s normal to lose about half a quart (500 milliliters) of blood. Following a cesarean surgery, losing about 1 quart (1,000 milliliters) of blood is normal.
What is Lochia?
Post-pregnancy bleeding is normal and is how your body expels the extra blood and tissue in your uterus that helped your baby grow. Most of the blood in lochia comes from the area where the placenta detached itself from the uterine wall during the birth of your child. This area leaves a wound that needs to heal—the endometrial lining that built up during pregnancy sloughs off post-pregnancy and contributes to lochia.
Phases of Lochia
Lochia Rubra: This is the first phase of post-pregnancy bleeding. It lasts 3-4 days following the birth of your child/children. The color is bright or dark red. It’s normal to see clots in your lochia during this phase. Normal size clots are smaller than a quarter or a small plum. You may have some pelvic cramping as your uterus contracts to return to its usual size.
Lochia Serosa: This is the second phase of post-pregnancy bleeding and typically lasts two weeks post-childbirth, during days 4-10 postpartum. You should notice your blood flow is lighter. The color of the blood flow is also changing from a light red to a watery pink or pinkish brown. You may still be blood clots during this phase, but they should be small in size and getting smaller as time goes on.
Lochia Alba: This is the third phase of post-pregnancy bleeding and typically lasts 2-6 weeks following childbirth. The color of the discharge changes from pink to a light brown to a yellowish-white color. However, you may still see an occasional spotting of blood. During this phase of post-pregnancy bleeding, primarily white blood cells leave the body after helping to heal your uterus after birth.
Type of Lochia |
Color |
Duration |
Rubra
|
Bright or dark red |
3-4 days |
Serosa
|
Pinkish-brown |
4-10 days |
Alba
|
Whitish-yellow |
10-28 days |
When will my period restart?
When Bleeding Becomes a Health Problem
What is Postpartum Hemorrhage?
Seek help immediately with your pregnancy care provider if you see any of the following signs of postpartum hemorrhage:
- Bright red blood beyond the third day after birth
- Blood clots bigger than a quarter
- Bleeding that saturates more than one sanitary pad an hour and doesn’t slow down or stop
- Blurred vision
- Chills
- Clammy skin
- Dizziness
- Fast heartbeat
- Lightheadedness or faint feeling
- Pale skin
- Pain and swelling around your vagina or perineum (area between the vagina and rectum)
- Nausea
- Weakness
If you have any of the signs and symptoms of postpartum hemorrhage, please call your healthcare provider or 911 immediately. The Center for Disease Control and Prevention has additional information on Urgent Maternal Warning Signs at this link:
https://www.cdc.gov/hearher/maternal-warning-signs/index.html
Managing Postpartum Bleeding
Protective products that help with bleeding include:
- Hospital-grade absorbent pads
- Regular absorbent pads
- Super-absorbent pads
- Reusable pad
- Organic pads
- Postpartum underwear (various sizes and absorbent levels available)
- Hybrid Pad-Ice pads
Shawana S. Moore, DNP, MSN, CRNP, WHNP-BC
Shawana S. Moore, DNP, CRNP, WHNP-BC, is a Philadelphia-based, board-certified women’s health nurse practitioner and the director of the Women’s Health-Gender Related Nurse Practitioner Program at Thomas Jefferson University.
The information contained on this article should not be used as a substitute for the medical care and advice of your health care professional.