YES!
I just had a baby girl in June of 2010. I do know that my OB, had taken my intestines out of my stomach to free room for my baby girl, but the intestines were not dis-attached from my body. I know that every woman is different, so there may be many different decisions made during a c section delivery, by the doctor. Every stomach and uterus is different, especially if the woman has already had a child, multiple children or a previous c section delivery. I had a friend laugh at me when I told her that happened to me, and she still doesn't believe me....LOL... however, I believe my Doctor Who explained to me the details, and my husband who saw it all...
YES! I just had a baby girl in June of 2010. I do know that my OB, had taken my intestines out of my stomach to free room for my baby girl, but the intestines were not dis-attached from my body. I know that every woman is different, so there may be many different decisions made during a c section delivery, by the doctor. Every stomach and uterus is different, especially if the woman has already had a child, multiple children or a previous c section delivery. I had a friend laugh at me when I told her that happened to me, and she still doesn't believe me....LOL... however, I believe my doctor who explained to me the details, and my husband who saw it all...
During a c section, you should not feel any pain, however you will probably feel a tugging and stretching sensation as the doctors pull the baby out
Yes.
don't know the answer
C. Pick up the intestines or organs with a clean, dry dressing
No. You can get pregnant after a C-section
During a c-section your body still has pregnancy hormones and it makes it easier for the tubes to begin to heal themselves and reconnect
C-Section
c-section
Either the way they came in, through the vagina, or if there are complications there will be a c-section where they will make a cut in your belly and take it out that way. Embryos gestate in the uterus, not in the stomach. Any baby in a stomach most likely arrived through the esophagus, and would pass out through the intestines...
Most ObGyn's will only deliver future pregancies after a c-section by another c-section. The primary reason for this is that a previous c-section greatly increases the chance of rupturing a uterus during natural birth.A ruptured uterus is a life threatening emergency for both mother and baby and generally must be removed (the mother can have no more future childern)Some OB's will allow a mother to try natural birth after a c-section... talk to you doctor.
They should not consider you to be first time pregnant following a C-section. They may consider your labor a first if your C-section was performed prior to labor, but that only means your labor may take a little longer than a second labor as first time labors usually take more time to progress.