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Cool newborn Baby Facts:

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Posted 6 months ago

 

  Cool newborn Baby Facts:

 

1- Your baby is born with very sophisticated hearing and can work out where a sound is coming from just 10 minutes after being born.

 

2- Your baby is born to smile. We know this because blind babies also smile, so it’s not just copying.


 

3- Psychologists have found that babies as young as just 2 days old can recognise their mothers from a tape recording of only one syllable.

 

4- At birth it takes your baby between five and 10 minutes to get used to something new, but by 3 months it will only take between 30 seconds and two minutes. And at 6 months, your baby will adjust in less than 30 seconds.

 

5- Your newborn baby prefers human speech to any other sound, which is why, when she is older and learning to talk, s/he will try to imitate human sounds rather than inanimate noises such as the telephone ringing.

 

6- In your baby’s first year, his/her brain will double to become half its final size.

 

7- Your baby’s cry has been specially designed to make you sit up and take notice. Researchers have discovered that new mums are able to distinguish their own

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First Trimester Bleeding

 

 

You’ve shared the exciting news of your pregnancy with your friends and family. Then, one morning you wake up and notice a spot of blood on your underwear, and suddenly you're as frightened as you've ever been.

 


Don't panic. Although bleeding during pregnancy is never considered "normal," bleeding during the first trimester is very common. In fact, approximately one-quarter of all women who deliver healthy babies experience some bleeding in the first trimester.

 

Of course, bleeding can also be a sign of impending miscarriage, so it's important to discuss any bleeding with your midwife or doctor. She or he will probably wish to examine you (though not necessarily on an emergency basis), and will most likely order an ultrasound test to further evaluate your pregnancy.

 

What causes bleeding in the first trimester? And what type of bleeding is likely to indicate a miscarriage? One possible cause of light bleeding in the first trimester is related to the aggressive growth of the placenta. As the placenta establishes contact with the maternal circulation, some bleeding of the uterine wall may occur. This could cause retro-placental bleeding (a small collection of blood behind the placenta) and some of the blood may escape, causing vaginal bleeding.

 

There are several signs that may indicate the bleeding is a symptom of impending miscarriage. The most sensitive sign, and the one that your practitioner will probably ask you about first, is pain. In an impending miscarriage, bleeding is almost always associated with some lower abdominal cramping. Also, the volume of bleeding is generally quite a bit heavier in an impending miscarriage than in a normal pregnancy.

 

A blighted ovum is the most common cause of miscarriage. This term is somewhat misleading because it is not necessarily the ovum that is abnormal, but rather the combination of the ovum and sperm. The resulting chromosomal defect is so severe that although the pregnancy advances, development cannot proceed beyond the earliest stage. In most cases of blighted ovum, only the placental tissue, not the embryo, has developed. A blighted ovum does not indicate that either parent has a chromosomal abnormality. It affects only the fertilized ovum in question. There is no reason to believe that it will happen again in a future pregnancy.

 

This has important implications for dealing with miscarriage, both medically and psychologically. Because a blighted ovum is determined at the moment of conception, nothing can be done to prevent a miscarriage. If it's going to happen, it's going to happen. This also means that if you do have a miscarriage, you should never blame yourself. Virtually nothing you do can disrupt a normal pregnancy and, conversely, there is nothing you can do to save an abnormal one.

 

Lastly, bleeding may also be a sign of a much less common condition-ectopic pregnancy. Ectopic pregnancy, also known as tubal pregnancy, occurs when the fertilized ovum fails to travel all the way down the fallopian tube to the uterus. Instead, it implants in the wall of the fallopian tube. Such a pregnancy can never be successful. It may also cause serious health complications for the mother. An ultrasound test is often very helpful in diagnosing ectopic pregnancy.

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 Absolute contracindications include the following:

 

 

Previous classical or T-shaped incision or extensive transfundal uterine surgery. Uterine rupture rates in these women are 4-9% whereas rupture rates for the general population of people attempting VBAC is only 1% (0.6-1.7%).

 


 Previous uterine rupture. These women will have a 6% rupture recurrence rate if the previous rupture was in the lower segment of the uterus and a 32% rupture rate if the previous rupture is in the upper or fundal portions of the uterus. As such, these women should be delivered by repeat cesarean before labor begins.

 

 Medical or Obstetric complications which would advise against vaginal delivery.

 

 Inability of the labor facility to perform emergency cesarean delivery should complications arise. This includes lack of appropriate anesthesia care, surgeon, or facility.

 

 

Two prior uterine scars with no history of successful vaginal delivery. Risk of uterine rupture is 5 times greater in women with 2 previous cesarean deliveries as compared to women with 1 previous cesarean delivery. However, women with a previous vaginal delivery with subsequent cesarean are only at 1/4 risk of rupture when compared to those with no vaginal delivery previously.

 

 There are conditions one would think might be on this list but are not. Macrosomia greater than 4,000 or 4,500 grams does not confer a greater risk of uterine rupture unless there is no history of previous vaginal delivery. The successfull VBAC rate is 60-90%. Gestational age of greater than 40 weeks does not increase uterine rupture, but does decrease the rate of successful VBAC. Women with an unknown scar have similar rates of uterine rupture and successfull VBAC as those women who are known to have a low tranverse uterine incision. This is because the vast majority of women with unknown scar will have a lower transverse uterine incision.


The use of induction or augmentation agents increases the risk of uterine rupture in women attempting a trial of labor. Uterine rupture rates are 5 times greater in women undergoing oxytocin induction than in women undergoing elective repeat cesarean. When cervical ripening is performed using prostaglandins, the risk of rupture rises to 24.5 per 1,000 or 15 times the risk with having an elective repeat cesarean.

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 Successful Cesarean section performed by indigenous healers in en:Kahura, Uganda. As observed by R. W. Felkin in 1879.

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Ectopic Pregnancy


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 Ectopic X 3


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Post Partem Hemorrhage


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