The first trimester is the most crucial to your baby's development. During this period, your baby's body structure and organ systems develop. Most miscarriages and birth defects occur during this period. Your body also undergoes major changes during the first trimester.
Macrosomia occurs when a baby gets more nutrients in utero than she needs, causing her to grow faster and larger than usual.
No matter the size or shape, whether you're big or small, or carrying low or high, your pregnant belly is the perfect place for your baby to develop and grow!
The brain begins to form early in the first trimester and continues until you give birth. During pregnancy, fetal brain development will be responsible for certain actions like breathing, kicking, and the heartbeat.
Symptoms are things you feel yourself that others can't see, like having a sore throat or feeling dizzy. The most common symptom of stillbirth is when you stop feeling your baby moving and kicking. Others include cramps, pain or bleeding from the vagina.
04/6​Normal growth
Your doctor will perform an ultrasound to track the growth of your baby's health and development. Generally, a foetus grows by two inches every month. So, by the seventh month, your baby should be 14 inches long. By the end of nine-month, a foetus weighs around 3 kilos and 18-20 inches long.A woman becomes able to get pregnant when she ovulates for the first time — about 14 days before her first menstrual period. This happens to some women as early as when they are eight years old, or even earlier. Most often, ovulation begins before women turn 20.
The myths
- Morning sickness. You may have heard that the severity of morning sickness is a clue about your baby's sex.
- Skin condition. Some people believe that a girl baby will steal the mother's beauty.
- Cravings. With boys, you crave salty and savory foods like pickles and potato chips.
- Heart rate.
- Carrying.
Your 40 weeks of pregnancy are counted as nine months.
At 2 months, baby is about the size of a raspberry. They still look a lot like an alien, but some human features are starting to develop: eyes, a nose, a mouth, and ears are growing on the outside, while important body systems — like the respiratory organs and nerves — are rapidly growing on the inside.
Bone starts to replace cartilage. The embryo begins to move, although the mother cannot yet feel it. By the end of the second month, your baby, now a fetus, is about 2.54cm (1 inch) long, weighs about 9.45g (1/3 ounce), and a third of baby is now made up of its head.
According to the theory, the placement of your developing placenta – which must be determined in a very precise way – can reveal your baby's sex. If your placenta is forming on the right side of your uterus, the baby is most likely a boy, the theory claims. If it's forming on the left side, it's probably a girl.
Your baby weighs about 1/8 of an ounce — just bigger than a penny. The tadpole-like tail is almost gone, and in its place are two little legs. Your baby's head is still huge compared to the body, but it will get more proportional in the weeks to come.