Pregnancy Guide-Pregnancy Week by week Stages

Pregnancy week by week stages

Looking for a weekly guide to pregnancy? Good luck to you We have received expertly approved information every week and quarter, including what happens with your growing baby and what changes are expected for you.

You will find thousands of articles and tools like amazing fetal development videos, our expiration date calculator and baby name finder. Meet other parents in our online community and get all of these and more in our free pregnancy app. Congratulations on the jump!

Pregnancy Guide
Pregnancy Guide
 Here We will Introduce you three stages:-

1.First trimester
2.Second trimester
3.Third quarter

First Trimester

After fertilization and implantation, a baby is first a fetus only: two-membered cells, from which all organs and body parts develop. Growing up quickly, your baby will soon learn about kidney bean size and is constantly growing. The heart beats faster and the intestines are formed. Your budding son or daughter's ears, eyelids, mouth and nose are also shaped.

Second Trimester

By the second trimester, babies are 3 1/2 inches long and weigh 1 1/2 ounces. Small, specialized fingerprints are now in place, and the heart sends 25 quarts of blood per day. As the weeks go by, your baby's skeleton begins to harden from rubber cartilage to bone and he develops hearing ability. If you haven’t already, you’ll kick in and flirt soon.

Third Trimester

The babies weigh 2 1/4 pounds. They can blink, which now entices the game. And began to lubricate their wrinkled skin when placed on baby fat. They are also developing fingernails, toenails and real hair (or at least some fiber fudge) and adding billions of neurons to their brain. Your developing baby will weigh in the womb during the last week. Throughout this term, the average child is 19 inches long and weighs 7 pounds.
Pregnancy week by week stages
Pregnancy week by week stages

How we calculate Pregnancy due date:-

Like most healthcare providers, we can calculate your due date by counting 40 weeks from the first day of your last period. If your cycle is consistently about 4 weeks long, that day is usually about two weeks before you conceive.

But if you happen to know the day you conceived – perhaps you were tracking your ovulation and you know the day your egg must have been fertilized – we can calculate your due date by counting 38 weeks from that date.

Your healthcare provider might revise your due date if she has reason to believe it's off target. She'll measure your baby during an ultrasound exam, and if your baby is much bigger or smaller than expected, she'll provide you with a new due date.

Of course, your due date is just an estimate. Only 1 in 20 women delivers on her due date. You're just as likely to go into labor any day during the two weeks before or after.

Post a Comment

0 Comments