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If you truly conceived, no. Women do not have regular periods after becoming pregnant. What you experienced was probably implantation bleeding. This bleeding is caused by the fertilized egg attaching itself to the uterine wall.
No. The human embryo would die because it cannot attach itself to the uterine wall of the cow due to the fact that the placenta of a human is much different from the placenta of a cow, and that a human and a cow are genetically very different from each other.
The fertilized egg (which develops into a baby eventually) implants itself into the uterine wall/lining. The lining surrounds the egg as it matures and develops into a fetus and a placenta and amniotic sac surrounds the fetus eventually to nourish it.
In the fallopian tubes or in the abdominal cavity, attaching sometimes to organs such as the kidneys or intestines.
Fertilized eggs implant themselves on the uterine lining to provide a place for the placenta to develope. The placenta attaches the baby to the mother via umbillical cord to supply nourishment, oxygen, and blood to the fetus. Occasionally (not very often) the fertilized egg will implant itself in the fallopian tube in which case is called an ectopic pregnancy. Ectopic pregnancies must be terminated due to the high risk of killing the mother as well as the fetus. If an egg doesnt implant it will be expelled with the uterine lining that sheds during a womans period.
virus
Yes. Cramps don't prevent you from eating or drinking anything. Cramps occur in the muscles of your abdomen, not inside your stomach itself. You can eat or drink anything you like if you have cramps.
During pregnancy, the placenta attaches itself to the uterus to provide the developing fetus blood, oxygen, and nourishment as well as removing waste from your baby. The placenta may implant itself at a low position in the uterus, during the early stages of pregnancy. Normally, as the uterus begins to expand to provide more room for your baby, the placenta moves upward but away of the cervix. If it doesn't move away, it may be blocking the opening of the cervix. This is known as placenta previa. If this does occur, the placenta will detach itself from the uterus in advance as the cervix begins to open up for labor. Generally, placenta previa can be detected before any severe harm is caused.
The fertilized egg is implanted into the uterine lining.
The ovary will not become anything. It will remain the ovary. None of the reproductive organs morph into anything else. The egg that is fertilized divides into cells while in the uterus and then attaches itself to the uterine lining. Once it is embedded into the uterus, it starts to grow into a baby, and it creates a placenta, amniotic sack, etc.
During pregnancy, the placenta attaches itself to the uterus to provide the developing fetus blood, oxygen, and nourishment as well as removing waste from your baby. The placenta may implant itself at a low position in the uterus, during the early stages of pregnancy. Normally, as the uterus begins to expand to provide more room for your baby, the placenta moves upward but away of the cervix. If it doesn't move away, it may be blocking the opening of the cervix. This is known as placenta previa. If this does occur, the placenta will detach itself from the uterus in advance as the cervix begins to open up for labor. Generally, placenta previa can be detected before any severe harm is caused.
A small amount of bleeding in the beginning of pregnancy is often "implantation bleeding" and is caused by the egg attaching itself to the uterine wall (when it implants, it also attaches itself to the mothers blood vessels, which is where the blood comes from). It is normal if it is light bleeding. Any heavy bleeding, or bleeding that lasts more than a couple days, should be checked out by a doctor right away.