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  2. A week-by-week guide to common pregnancy symptoms - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/week-week-guide-common...

    Your little one: This week is right in the middle of baby's most active period, which is usually between 27 and 32 weeks, because they still have room to move around. Pregnancy Symptoms Week 30

  3. Fetal movement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fetal_movement

    Also starting about week 12, the thoracic diaphragm moves up and down as if the fetus were breathing, but this movement disappears about week 16 and does not resume until the third trimester. [16] Movements such as kicking continue, and the mother usually feels movement for the first time, an event called quickening, during the fifth month. [17]

  4. Transient tachypnea of the newborn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transient_tachypnea_of_the...

    It is most common in infants born by caesarian section without a trial of labor after 35 weeks of gestation. Male infants and infants with an umbilical cord prolapse or perinatal asphyxia are at higher risk. Parental risk factors include use of pain control or anesthesia during labor, asthma, and diabetes. [7]

  5. Mom-to-be’s severe chest pain dismissed as panic attack. It ...

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    In early May 2023, a 35-week pregnant Amanda Banic visited the hospital with chest pain. Doctors told her she was experiencing indigestion and a panic attack — and sent her home.

  6. Maternal physiological changes in pregnancy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maternal_physiological...

    According to a study conducted by Whitcome, et al., lumbar lordosis can increase from an angle of 32 degrees at 0% fetal mass (i.e. non-pregnant women or very early in pregnancy) to 50 degrees at 100% fetal mass (very late in pregnancy). Postpartum, the angle of the lordosis declines and can reach the angle prior to pregnancy.

  7. Late preterm infant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Late_preterm_infant

    Late preterm infants are infants born at a gestational age between 34 + 0 ⁄ 7 weeks and 36 + 6 ⁄ 7 weeks. [1] They have higher morbidity and mortality rates than term infants (gestational age ≥37 weeks) due to their relative physiologic and metabolic immaturity, even though they are often the size and weight of some term infants.

  8. Mom, 35, speaks out after her body rejected her third ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/mom-35-speaks-her-body...

    At 23 weeks pregnant, she found out her baby "was likely becoming anemic" due to the blood type mismatch, Yeager says. "I went right from the ultrasound appointment to the hospital."

  9. Fetus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fetus

    The fetus is considered full-term between weeks 37 and 40 when it is sufficiently developed for life outside the uterus. [14] [15] It may be 48 to 53 cm (19 to 21 in) in length when born. Control of movement is limited at birth, and purposeful voluntary movements continue to develop until puberty. [16] [17]