Movement of the baby. First felt 12 - 16 weeks after conception.
Grows inside your uterus with baby and gives baby oxygen and nutrients from your body as well as getting rid of waste. Also called the afterbirth.
Yellow fluid that is formed in the breasts around 16 week of pregnancy. The first fluid your baby will swallow when you nurse. Contains nutrients that strengthen baby's immune system in the early weeks after birth.
Sometimes just called the cord, it connects the growing baby to the placenta. Nutrients from the food you eat are carried to your baby from the placenta through the cord.
The last part of your labor, when your baby is moving down the birth canal. The hardest, but shortest part, lasting 15 - 20 minutes. Cervix dilates from 7 - 10 cm.
Sometimes labor doesn't start by itself and may need some help. Help is offered with medication, usually given through an IV. When medication is used to start labor or make labor go faster, contractions may start off very strong and hard.
Term used for baby's "age" between conception and birth. This period lasts nine months, or 36-40 weeks, or approximately 280 days.
The process of giving birth is such hard work that it is called labor.
A baby with mild, moderate, or severe disabilities. These disabilities can be mental or physical, sometimes both.
Responding to something without having to learn to do so.
Method of giving medicine by inserting a very small needle into a vein, usually in the arm.
Dry red rash (prickly heat) caused by your baby being too warm.
Thinning of the cervix as contractions occur early in the labor process.
Space between the vagina and the rectum in a female, where doctor may perform an episiotomy during childbirth.
Opening, or neck of the uterus.
Condition affecting babies whose mothers drink alcohol during pregnancy. Drinking alcohol can cause brain damage resulting in retardation.
Fine hair which develops on your fetus at about 6 months.
Mucous that forms to plug the cervix (opening of the uterus) that protects your baby from germs.