Babies with tetrology of fallot have poor oxygen-saturated blood due to pulmonary stenosis and right ventricular outflow tract obstruction. In blood with normal oxygen levels carbohydrates break down into water and carbon dioxide but in blood with low oxygen levels carbohydrates break down for energy and make lactic acid.
This component of tetralogy of fallot is known as right ventricular hypertrophy. It is caused by the fact that the right ventricle, which transports oxygenated blood to the atrium, is working harder to attempt to get more of that blood to the rest of the body. Since the heart is a muscle, it will get thicker as it works harder.
In normal conditions, blood is pumped to the body by the left side of the heart while the right side pumps it to the lungs. Because of the tetralogy of fallot, the hole between the right and left pumping chambers allows the blood to travel across the right and left ventricles but also out into the body artery.
their bodies tell them that they need more oxygen and so breathe faster to try and get the oxygen their body requires and depends on.
Yes, they will have normal babies.
In normal, unspoiled milk, there are no acids found. As milk starts to spoil, lactic acid becomes the predominate acid.
yes.
because they don't have normal capabilities like normal babies do..
because they don't have normal capabilities like normal babies do..
Because they are a normal species and normal species usually have babies and you spelled babies wrong!
Babies are often weighed as they develop, and records kept to ensure weight gain is normal.
no
Yes, little people can have normal babies.