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Magical pregnancy clipart. Use these clipart for scrapbooking, invitation cards, greeting cards, wrapping paper, cutting machines, mug decoration, home decoration, wall art, t-shirts and many more! __________ You will get a 2 zip file: - 9 EPS - file for Adobe Illustrator or other vector programs. - 9 SVG - files for cutting machines such as Cricut and Silhouette. - 9 PNG (with transparent background, 12x12 in, 300 dpi) - 9 JPG ( 12x12 in, 300 dpi) Standard license is included - it grants the right to use clipart for personal and limited commercial purposes. ___________ Please note that this is a digital download ONLY, no physical product will be shipped. ___________ INSTANT DOWNLOAD When you make a purchase from our shop you will receive an email from Etsy with a link for you to be able to download your new products. You should be able to download the files instantly after purchase. ___________ TERMS OF USE You may NOT: - resale on Etsy or any other websites. - redistribute the purchased files (also for free). - print-on-demand services. - create digital products using the purchased graphics. - use graphics for LOGO (extended license only) You may: - use the graphics for your personal projects. - use the graphics to create a physical product for sale. You may create up to 500 physical products for sale with this commercial license. If you would like to sell more than 500 products, please purchase the extended license. ___________ RETURN Digital downloads are not eligible for refunds or returns. All sales are final. Please read the listing carefully prior to purchase. If you have any issues at all with the file, please let me know, I'm always happy to help. ___________ All illustrations in this shop are original and created by me. SanaDesignShop All Rights Reserved Thanks for visiting our shop!
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Anxiety in gestating mothers appears to affect the course of brain development in their fetuses, changing neural connectivity in the womb, a new study by Children's National Hospital researchers suggests. The findings, published Dec. 7, 2020, in JAMA Open Network, could help explain longstanding links between maternal anxiety and neurodevelopmental disorders in their children and suggests an urgent need for interventions to diagnose and decrease maternal stress.
Which mother wouldn't want a smart baby! Much of your work towards making a baby with a well-developed brain starts right after three weeks post
This is a print of an original watercolor I made. It depicts a fetus surrounded by its extraembryonic membranes (the layers enclosing the embryo inside the uterus). I'm proud of the details in this painting, particularly how the fetus seems to radiate life and how the surrounding tissue reflects the protective elements of the womb. ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– Please read the description and FAQ below for more information on Framing, Customizations, GoBig! Prints, and Shipping. If you have any questions, please reach out to us over Etsy messages. ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– PAPER: The print will come on 100% cotton rag 300gsm Archival Matte Paper or 340gsm Cold Press Fine Art Paper. EU and UK orders are printed with ultra wide gamut inks on 310 gsm Hahnemühle German Etching paper. ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– FRAMING: Our prints do not come with frames. If you would like to add frames, you can find our framing options here (USA only): https://www.etsy.com/listing/1593299504/framing-for-lyon-road-art-prints-1-3 ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– SHIPPING: If you need your order faster, choose my Express option! If you need it sooner or by a specific day, please send me a message. Customizing your prints may add additional processing time to your order. ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– INTERNATIONAL ORDERS: Please include your email and phone number in your order for international shipping and customs. Thank you! Please read our FAQ below for information about international shipping: https://www.lyonroadart.com/pages/f-a-q © 2019 Lyon Road. This artwork may not be reproduced in any way. All rights reserved.
This product is a detailed study guide for nurses and related medical field students covering obstetric nursing and the birthing process. It contains over 100 slides with text, images, and diagrams. ✨Topics included: physiologic effects of labor on the mother and fetus, labor mechanisms, and stages of labor. ✨ This study guide also goes over HESI exam topics related to maternity to help with HESI preparation. ✨Links to other study guides✨ https://www.etsy.com/shop/DantzlerGallery?section_id=44804586
Maternal care for hydrops fetalis, second trimester, ICD-10: O36.22. Symptoms, Chapter, Cases. Maternal Care for Hydrops Fetalis During the Second Trimester Hydrops fetalis is a serious condition that can occur during pregnancy, where there is an abnor...
Feto-maternal microchimerism (FMM) involves bidirectional cross-placental trafficking during pregnancy, leading to a micro-chimeric state that can persist fo...
I'm so fascinated by Embryology. The first time we ever met with an RE to discuss Embryo Adoption, he sat us down in his office with this really cool book and told us so much precise, scientific information that I literally walked out with a headache. I was on overload! Over the years I've come to understand it better, so I thought I'd explain some here for anyone interested. Warning, this may be very dry. You've been warned. After the photo below that looks like this, I share details of our last transfer, if you want to skip to that part. An embryo is, quite literally, the earliest form of human life. It is what is created when a sperm fertilizes an egg. A lot of people use the term embryo and egg interchangeably. They differ in that an egg is not fertilized, and therefore, is not life. The man and the woman, or in this case, their "contributions" to the baby making process, have not come together yet. The embryo is created when the sperm successfully penetrates the egg and fertilizes it and human life begins. It gets a little confusing though because "eggish" terms are used to explain embryos, namely "shell" and "hatching." An embryo begins as one single cell. The one-celled embryo is called a zygote. The next day, it multiplies to 2 cells and then 4 cells. Then it is called a morula. The third day, it multiplies to 8 cells. By day 5, the cells have multiplied so many times that they all blend together under the microscope and you can't distinguish one cell from another because there are so many. When the embryo reaches this stage, it is called a Blastocyst. Embryo Transfers are usually done on Day 3 or Day 5. They used to do them on Day 1 and 2 but that is less practiced now. These are also the same days on which embryos can be frozen. For some reason, they don't do transfers or freeze them on Day 4. It has something to do with what's happening in the embryo at that stage of development and you can't interrupt it. Our embryos have always been day 5 embryos. They have been frozen on the 5th day. When they are thawed, the 5th day "resumes" (even if it is now, years later) and then the transfer is later that same day. From all they can tell, there is no difference between 1 day frozen and 10 years frozen. For all intents and purposes, it appears that time quite literally stops. When an embryo reaches Blastocyst Stage, it needs to break through the "shell" or "ring" you see in the photos above. When it has broken out, the embryo can then grab on to the wall of the uterus and implant and grow in pregnancy. If it doesn't break out, it can't "stick" to the uterus and grow. The breaking out process is called "hatching." As the embryo grows, it becomes a fetus. Ethically, they all mean "baby," or "human," but they describe different ages, much like "toddler" and "teenager" and "elderly." This is also why the procedure to put the embryo in the woman's body is called a "Transfer" and not an Implantation. They are quite literally "transferring" (moving) the embryo from the vial it was frozen in to the woman's uterus. Whether it actually implants (grabs on, nestles in, burrows down) is up to the embryo and God. It's the same in spontaneously occurring pregnancy. The baby can be made, but it still may or may not implant--it orbits around in the uterus looking for a place to grab on, but it may or may not actually do so. In a Frozen Embryo Transfer, the doctor will "aim" the embryo for the part of the uterus that looks the most favorable, but that's as far as he can take it. This is a super awesome chart. Enlarge it to read all the way cool information. Embryos are graded on a scale. There are a few types of systems, but the two clinics we've used and the 3 clinics from our genetic families have all used the same system. My understanding is that this one is the most common. There is a different system for day 3 embryos but I am not familiar with it. The 5 Day Embryo grading format is Number-Letter-Letter. The number is a number from a scale of 1-5, with 5 being the most desirable. It indicates the degree to which the embryo has expanded inside its "shell," called the Trophectoderm. A 1 means it hasn't expanded or isn't growing. A 5 means it has hatched out. Our embryo was a 3, meaning it filled 70% of its shell. Then an embryo receives a letter grading of A-C for the quality of the "Inner Cell Mass" which are the cells that are the baby. A means that there are many cells, tightly packed (this is what they should be doing). B means that there are several cells, loosely packed. C means that there are very few large cells. Then it receives a second letter grading of A-C. This grades the quality of the Trophectoderm, the part that in the pictures looks like a shell. The Trophectoderm is what becomes the placenta in the event of implantation. A means that there are many cells forming a cohesive layer. B means that there are few cells, forming a loose layer. C means that there are very few large cells. Our embryo was graded 3AA. Seventy percent expanded, great inner cell mass, great Trophectoderm. Ethically, these grades don't really mean anything. As long as any cells are alive, I believe an embryo should be transferred. I don't think grades should ever be used to make life or death decisions. But the numbers do tell us where the embryo is at in its stage of development, which I find interesting. So here is our photo, explained. Though it received a 3AA Grading, the grading was made as soon as it was thawed and the photo was taken a little later. In Reproductive technology, an embryologist will often perform what is called "Assisted Hatching," wherein they make a tiny hole in the Trophectoderm to let the embryo out. That, to my understanding, is what is happening in this photo. The inner cell mass has broken through the Trophectoderm and hatched, and will hopefully be looking for someplace in my uterus to grab on to. The "ring" around the Trophectoderm, is, if I recall correctly, the solution in the dish, and not part of the embryo. None of my embryo photos have ever looked like this one before. I don't know if mine have never hatched this much, or if this photo was just taken later than the other ones have been taken. The camera is different, so perhaps the process is different. This doesn't really match up to 3AA because 3 means not hatched, so I think the difference is just time. For reference sake, these were my other embryo photos. This is a great example of how grades don't necessarily correspond to likelihood of further growth or pregnancy. I don't even remember the grades they all got, but they look so different. Lucy and Mary don't look super expanded at time of thaw, but eventually hatched and successfully implanted. Transfer 2's babies totally filled their cavities, but couldn't implant. Matthew looks "average" in expansion and he's happy and healthy here today. Transfer 4 looked great with nice big masses, but didn't result in a pregnancy. So we'll see what happens with this baby. Nevertheless, I'm super intrigued by all the nuances and highly precise information. These babies multiply and divide and grow so aggressively, I just can't understand how anyone thinks they aren't human life. If that's not life with a desire to keep on living, I don't know what is. So anyway, there's the skinny on all the stuff you never wanted to know about Embryology. I was pretty drugged up when I posted my last post, so I didn't include details about the transfer itself. Here we go, if you're interested. The transfer went well. My doctor is a man of few words. I wish I had asked more questions, but the Valium they give you to relax your uterus really puts me out of it. When he told us that one had died in thawing, it was a little like a kick in the gut. In 5 transfers, we've never lost one that way. But he told me as he was lying me down for the transfer so I didn't get to ask any questions or really digest the information. One baby living and one baby dying happened with Matthew--it's a bittersweet thing to digest. I don't want to get myself too upset because my body just needs to chill right now, so I think God is being gracious in keeping that process "shelved" for now. We are sad, but I am comforted to know that baby is with Jesus. He said the transfer went well. It was the quickest and physically easiest one I've ever had. The only thing he really said was that my C-Section scar wasn't in the way. Honestly, the weirdest things are compliments when dealing with infertility ;) Here is a video if you want to watch. We've never taken video before but we decided that if this worked, when we tell Matthew, we wanted to have something to show him if he wanted. Watch the area where the red circle is on this still image. You'll see the catheter come in, the embryo released from the catheter, and then the catheter will be removed and the embryo will remain behind, shown as a white oblong shape on the screen. The white is not the embryo itself, but the air the embryo was in. They put them in a little air bubble, in part so that they can see them when doing this procedure because they're so tiny. The black sort of cantaloupe looking shape around the red circle is the uterus. You probably need to full screen the video to be able to see anything. I came home and slept most of the day. My doctor doesn't believe in bed rest, so I wasn't restricted, but it took a long time for the Valium to wear off. I was still pretty out of it the next day. We stayed with my folks and spent a nice day with them just relaxing. We came home last night. By the evening, I was feeling "twinges" in my abdomen. Today, it had progressed to cramping and pressure, in addition to twinges. Those could be really good signs (this is about when the baby would implant if he or she is going to and those could be signs of that), or they could mean nothing. It's hard not to over analyze everything. Honestly, had I not just had a transfer, I probably wouldn't have even noticed these symptoms. But they were mildly uncomfortable so I just took it easy today, napping, and keeping my feet up (perfect, since my Packers football game was on anyway), and doing chores as I felt ok and then resting again when I got sore again. My beta is not for a while yet, so all we can do right now is wait. I still feel very much at peace, and with some hope. We'll see how soon before I break down and start testing on a home test. Right now I don't even own any because I never made it to the dollar store in my errands last week, and that's probably a good thing. That's all the news that's fit to print (and then some). Have a GREAT week!
Notable in the this fetus is an extraembryonic coelom in the umbilical cord. Loops of intestine are seen as a bulge of orange material in the cord near it's attachment to the abdominal wall. These loops will withdraw at arould week 11. If these do not return, the condition is called an omphalocele. Please see other images of Human Developement: www.flickr.com/photos/lunarcaustic/sets/72157617368698808/
Awarded first place in the 2018 AJN Book of the Year Awards in the Maternal-Child Health/Prenatal Nursing/ Childbirth category! Learn to provide the best prenatal, intrapartum, postpartum, and neonatal care possible. Maternal, Fetal, & Neonatal Physiology: A Clinical Perspective, 5th Edition includes expert insight and clinically relevant coverage of the physiologic changes that occur throughout all major periods of the perinatal experience. This classic reference gives you a solid foundation for assessment and therapeutic interventions, featuring an emphasis on the evolving interrelationships between mother, fetus, and neonate and adaptations of preterm and term infants to the extrauterine environment. - Solid coverage of the physiologic bases for assessment and therapeutic interventions make this an ideal resource for maternity, neonatal, women¿s health, or midwifery programs. - Synthesis of the latest research studies and evidence-based practice provides vital data on normal physiologic changes during the antepartum, intrapartum and postpartum periods, anatomic and functional development of the fetus, and developmental physiology of preterm and term neonates. - Coverage of pathophysiology and interventions for the pregnant woman, fetus, and newborn for selected abnormal events gives you a solid understanding of physiologic adaptations and developmental physiology relating to major body systems and metabolic processes. - Pharmacology tables offer quick access to key pharmacology information and drug effects with clinical examples. - NEW! Thoroughly updated content addresses the very latest practice issues and provides the basis for understanding physiologic adaptations in pregnant women, infants, and children. - NEW! Expanded coverage of maternal, fetal, neonatal, and pediatric physiology. - NEW! Soft cover and added color provide a contemporary look and feel.
3 Vintage Watercolor Babies Art Drawing Infant and Flowers Art Fetus in Womb Poster Pregnant Woman Gift Maternity Art Mother Day Gift ************************************************************************************************* BUY 2 GET 1 FREE ************************************************************************************************* You can download my artworks in a digital JPEG format and print it yourself in sizes 11x14 ************************************************************************************************* If you want to get another size or add a phrase, write me a note in the order ************************************************************************************************* Best regards, Papa Leo
7 discrete cardinal movements of the fetus occur over the course of labor and delivery: engagement, descent, flexion, internal rotation, extension, external rotation or restitution, and expulsion.
From when to expect common pregnancy symptoms to what to avoid, here's everything you need to know about your first trimester of pregnancy by week.
The mammalian placenta is more than just a filter through which nutrition and oxygen are passed from a mother to her unborn child. According to a new study, if a mother is exposed to stress during pregnancy, her placenta translates that experience to her fetus by altering levels of a protein that affects the developing brains of male and female offspring differently.
Maternity Monday: How to Dress like Kate Middleton while Pregnant Kate and I are both due in July. I say…
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High-risk pregnancies and pregnancy complications present complex challenges for both expectant mothers and healthcare providers. These situations demand a specialized and compassionate nursing approach to ensure the best possible outcomes for maternal and fetal health.