About Abortion Options
- A medicinal abortion is an option for women in the early stages of pregnancy. Generally, between 7 and 9 weeks women can take a combination of medicines: either mifepristone or methortexate, which weakens the connection between the embryo and the uterus, and then another drug, misoprostol, which causes the uterus to contract and push the embryo out.
- Up through the seventh week following a woman's last menstrual cycle, a procedure called manual vacuum aspiration can be performed. This procedure includes a long thin tube inserted in the vagina and used to suction the embryo from the womb.
- Suction curettage is the most common type of surgical abortion procedure. This encompasses a combination of stretching the cervix, suctioning and cutting out the embryo. The cervix must be stretched to accommodate a larger embryo, and both suction and cutting are necessary to completely detach the embryo and pull it from the body.
- An abortion performed after 13 weeks of pregnancy is often referred to as a "D and E." These include the widening and softening of the cervix, more so than in other surgical abortions, and the suctioning out of the fetus.
- An Intact D and X is a late second- or third-term abortion. This includes having a physician medically collapse or crush the fetus's head and then deliver its body as normal. Abortions are rare after 24 weeks of pregnancy, unless there is a medical condition that warrants such an extreme measure as an Intact D and X. Because of the severe nature of this form of abortion, congress outlawed it in 2003.