In what looks like movie trick or call it miracle, a doctor has
recorded the moment he delivered a baby inside an intact amniotic sac.
READ MORE: http://news.naij.com/58674.html
The photo was taken by Obstetrician, Aris Tsigris after he delivered a baby through caesarean section. He uploaded the photo on Facebook.
READ MORE: http://news.naij.com/58674.html
The photo was taken by Obstetrician, Aris Tsigris after he delivered a baby through caesarean section. He uploaded the photo on Facebook.
According
to the doctor, because the sac had not been punctured, the baby did not
even realise it had been born and behaved as if it was still inside the
mother’s womb.
The amniotic sac starts to form and fill with fluid within days of a woman conceiving.
Amniotic fluid is mainly water but from about week 10 onwards, the baby passes small amounts of urine into the fluid.
READ MORE: http://news.naij.com/58674.html
The amniotic sac is a bag of fluid inside
the womb where the unborn baby develops and grows. It is also referred
to as the ‘membranes’, because the sac is made of two membranes called
the amnion and the chorion.
The sac is filled with clear, pale fluid, in which the unborn baby floats and moves.
The fluid helps to cushion the baby from bumps and injury, as well as providing them with fluids that they can breathe and swallow. The fluid also maintains a constant temperature for the baby.
The sac is filled with clear, pale fluid, in which the unborn baby floats and moves.
The fluid helps to cushion the baby from bumps and injury, as well as providing them with fluids that they can breathe and swallow. The fluid also maintains a constant temperature for the baby.
The amniotic sac starts to form and fill with fluid within days of a woman conceiving.
Amniotic fluid is mainly water but from about week 10 onwards, the baby passes small amounts of urine into the fluid.
READ MORE: http://news.naij.com/58674.html
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