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Newsletter from Essential Baby - Week
34
Your Baby.
Fetal size: crown-rump 32cm (12.8 inches), crown-toe 44cm (19.8 inches).
Fetal weight: 2.25kg (5 pounds).
Your baby is now perfectly formed and has the proportions of a newborn.
Now it's simply a matter of your baby gaining some weight and doing
some further maturing before he/she is ready to be born. It's becoming
more cramped in your uterus as your baby continues to mature. Consequently
your baby curls up more and starts to move a bit less.
Everything is mature except the lungs, which will continue to prepare
themselves for breathing air after birth. Although the lungs aren't
fully developed, almost all babies born at 34 weeks will survive, but
will probably experience some breathing difficulties.
Your Pregnancy.
Your health care professional will continue to check that you and your
uterus are growing at the right rate to ensure that your baby is growing
normally. Don't worry if you look different to other people at this
stage in your pregnancy - everyone is different and there is no effective
means of comparing yourself to others.
Ruptured membranes - or "waters breaking" is when the membranes
of the amniotic sac (that has been holding the baby) break. It can either
be a slow trickle or a sudden gush of fluid from the vagina. This can
happen during labour or even hours before labour commences. Your health
care professional should be notified if you think that your waters have
broken and you should take note of the colour of the fluid.
False Labour - will sometimes happen before your real labour begins.
You may believe you are in real labour because false labour contractions
can be very painful. You may be able to identify false labour by observing
your contractions and comparing them to what you should feel in real
labour. False labour contractions may also be felt as discomfort in
other parts of the body (back, lower abdomen and groin). They will be
more irregular than real labour contractions, and are usually shorter
(less than 45 seconds). Real labour contractions result in pain that
starts at the top of the uterus then radiates outwards to the whole
uterus, the lower back and into the pelvis. Braxton Hicks contractions
can be felt from early on in your pregnancy. If these irregular, painless
contractions increase later in your pregnancy they are also considered
to be false labour rather than real labour. Now is a good time to start
thinking about what you will need to take to hopsital.
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