Hola! This is second and third trimester discussion -- discuss
away!!! Feel free to ask anything or to answer anything that anyone has
ask -- it's a free-for-all of knowledge and education! If you have a
question that you would prefer not to have associated with your SN,
please feel free to pm me and I will post it, as I have no shame. If you
have suggestions for this post, let me know.
Married August 2003
BFP: January 8, 2012
Due: September 5, 2012
DS: August 14, 2012
BFP: November 5, 2013
Due: July 11, 2014
MMC Detected d&c: December 29, 2013 12w5d
BFP: June 10, 2014
Due: February 16, 2015
Re: Second and Third Trimester Discussion (11/03)
My question is about movement too - I'm 27 weeks and baby boy is seriously doing the hokey pokey river dance with back flips constantly. I have never felt a baby move like this ... Does anyone have any experience with an active in utero baby? Does this mean he's going to be crazy active outside? Should I start building a bigger fence? (LOL) (sort of not kidding)...
His movement also makes me worry more about a cord accident. Does this increase his risk of getting tangled?
Should I just stop worrying and see this as a good thing?
When will he run out of room and return to that popcorn feeling?
I have a doctor's appointment this afternoon. My list of questions for her might get me committed. I'm a crazy person. :S
I'm trying to get the basics in place before Christmas shopping begins.
@dragonfly1809 - good luck at your appt!
***Losses mentioned.*** TTC #1 since May 2012. Me: 37, OH: 41. Ectopic August 2012 => tubal damage.
You may not use them for long, but when you do you'll be happy to have them.
@dragonfly1809 - my LO is extremely active. No idea what this means in terms of her personality/energy level once she's an outside baby. However, my MFM always does a biophysical profile and my LO always scores the highest because of her activity level. The doc says it means she's strong & vital ... they've never mentioned concerns about cord accidents or other issues in the womb due to activity.
BTW ... at 32 weeks my LO went head down for the first time in the entire pregnancy. She was laying transverse the entire time (she would reverse herself from right to left/left to right a lot except for week 31 when she faced breech. No one has been concerned about her positioning to date; they still have time and room to move from my understanding until the mid-30 weeks. Even then some babies find a way to make it head down in the last few weeks.
TTC since Sept 2011, Unexplained IF
Oct 12 - Jan 14: 3 clomid/TI cycles, 2 hysteroscopies, 2 IUIs, 1 BFP (MMC @ 12w), 2 more IUIs
Feb 14: Gonal-f + IUI #5 = BFP! (EDD 11/4/14)
Baby boy arrived 11/13/14!
I have a very active LO, too and I've been wondering about the same things. Some times he just goes crazy in there! DD was never so active and she's a pretty laid back toddler. I'm wondering if he's going to be wild child! When he does get really active I get worried about cord accidents, too. I really don't know what the stats are on cord accidents in relation to how active baby is, though. I try not to worry about it, but it's still there in the back of my mind.
BFP #2 11/3/10; BO at u/s 10w6d 12/16/10; Natural MC 1/7/11; D&C 4/21/11
BFP #3 10/27/11 Please stick, LO!! 2/6/12 It's a Girl! Alexis Grace born 6/29/12
BFP#4 4/27/14 Stick, stick, stick!! 8/11/14 It's a Boy! Evan Wesley born 1/8/15
"Patience is waiting. Not passively waiting. That is laziness. But to keep going when the going is hard and slow, that is patience." Let it Be (blog) ♥ My BFP Charts
This time I'm not leaving without you.
@peggels24 I think my LO just flipped over the weekend as I have noticed a change in movement, but she has been transverse since 18w. I hope to find out at my appt next week, but my midwife assured me there is still plenty of time for her to flip if it hasn't happened yet.
TTC Since 04/01/13
BFP #1 04/28/13 Its twins! EDD 01/08/2014 MMC confirmed 06/27/13 D&C 07/17/13
BFP#2 05/19/14 EDD 01/30/2015 Please be our rainbow!
My Ovulation Chart
*~*~* All AL Welcome*~*~*
We used the pack and play as a bassinet for the first month or so before moving to the crib and it worked great. It was also nice to take with us on trips. I actually picked up an extra one at a yard sale, so we had one upstairs in our room and one down stairs in the living room. The down stairs one had a changing table on it, which was really nice. It also was a good place to let DD nap during the day so I could keep a close eye on her.
Some people swear by the rock and play, but we did just fine with out one. I skipped the bouncer, too. I got a swing/ seat combo (Fisher Price space saver) that worked really well. It worked well as some place to put DD down in when I need to fold laundry, or eat, or whatever else. We had a play mat, too. DD really loved the hanging toys on it and it was a good place for tummy time.
BFP #2 11/3/10; BO at u/s 10w6d 12/16/10; Natural MC 1/7/11; D&C 4/21/11
BFP #3 10/27/11 Please stick, LO!! 2/6/12 It's a Girl! Alexis Grace born 6/29/12
BFP#4 4/27/14 Stick, stick, stick!! 8/11/14 It's a Boy! Evan Wesley born 1/8/15
"Patience is waiting. Not passively waiting. That is laziness. But to keep going when the going is hard and slow, that is patience." Let it Be (blog) ♥ My BFP Charts
This time I'm not leaving without you.
Married August 2003
Hey ladies. Everyone worried about stillbirth. I did an exhaustive literature search and have found the following information.
The data is from a study done between 2006 and 2008 and includes 512 stillborn neonates. The mothers consented to a post-mortem exam (autopsy) of the babies and also to the review of their medical records in pregnancy.
Interestingly 60% of the moms were given a probable or likely cause of death. Almost 4 out of 10 were not given a solid reason and those moms were closer to term or were post-dates. It is an obstetrical fact that post-dates pregnancies are more likely to result in stillbirth so that doesn't surprise anyone.
Here are the most common reasons:
-Obstetrical complications (abruption of the placenta, multiple gestation, pre-term birth): 30%
-Documented existing placental disease: 23%
-Fetal genetic/structural disease (heart problems, anencephaly, small for gestational age, etc): 13%
-Maternal or Fetal infection: 13%
-Umbilical cord abnormalities (single vessel, abnormal insertion into fetus): 10%
-Hypertensive (high blood pressure) disorders (pre-eclampsia, etc): 9%
It also mattered how far the pregnancy was. Women 24-27 weeks were more likely to lose a baby due to infection, abruption of the placenta, and fetal abnormalities (mostly small for gestational age or intrauterine growth restricted babies). Women after that (28+ weeks) primarily lead with abruption but were mostly unexplained (and in the minority).
The article also explains that many healthy children have a nuchal cord (cord around the neck) but this does not cause compromise enough to cause suffocation/death. Some children are also born with a knot in the cord which also does not cause complications. This idea of a "cord accident" is not well documented in the literature and seems to be what they say when they don't have a reason. Also a lot of moms do not consent to an autopsy which may reveal the cause of death.
So here is what I think about all of this.
If you have had normal level 2 and surveillance ultrasounds and have regular fetal movement you should feel reassured. If you don't have any medical problems (or they are well managed or controlled) you should feel reassured.
Maternal risk factors for stillbirth include:
Smoking (even as few as 10 cigarettes per day)
Having pre-existing high blood pressure or diabetes
Intimate partner violence (trauma is a major cause of abruption of the placenta)
Advanced Maternal Age (>35 due to more issues with placentas)
BMI >30 pre pregnancy
History of previous stillbirth
Multiple gestation
Nullipara (first baby)
"In 2001-2002 in the United States, the stillbirth rates for white, Hispanic and black women were 1/202, 1/83 and 1/87."
BFP #2: m/c at 7w, February, 2014
BFP #3: It's a BOY! Please be our rainbow! Due February, 2015
*everyone always welcome*
***Losses mentioned.*** TTC #1 since May 2012. Me: 37, OH: 41. Ectopic August 2012 => tubal damage.
***Losses mentioned.*** TTC #1 since May 2012. Me: 37, OH: 41. Ectopic August 2012 => tubal damage.
@pblge there are about 15 sources I looked at but here are the most recent and interesting.
World Health Organization. Definitions and indicators in Family Planning Maternal & Child Health and Reproductive Health. Geneva: WHO Press.
BFP #2: m/c at 7w, February, 2014
BFP #3: It's a BOY! Please be our rainbow! Due February, 2015
*everyone always welcome*
My LO likes to push herself into my ribs/lungs the last couple of weeks as well.
A co-worker's baby used to do this to her and she passed out at work a couple of times - scary. But she was fine and so was LO. He would just press on her lungs her and she couldn't catch her breath (and her LO wasn't very big).
_______________ Thank you! I'm glad I'm not alone. We better not pass out... that does not sound fun.
__________
Yeah, definitely not fun. But it made for interesting office gossip at the time.
I actually have multiple risk factors and am going to worry no matter what. But the baby being super active is a risk factor for nothing. I'd rather focus on the things I can control like my blood sugars, my weight gain, etc.
BFP #2: m/c at 7w, February, 2014
BFP #3: It's a BOY! Please be our rainbow! Due February, 2015
*everyone always welcome*
BFP #2: m/c at 7w, February, 2014
BFP #3: It's a BOY! Please be our rainbow! Due February, 2015
*everyone always welcome*
Married August 2003
Married August 2003