Depends. If the placenta comes out as well the umbilical coed is attached to it. if it's just the fetus, no unless the cord let go of the placenta. You always have to go and get checked afterwards.
well, Some experts think that too much alcohol can actually make the umbilical cord stump stay on longer, which most parents definitely don't want. and its purple because its easy for the cord to come off hope this helps :)
When a woman is pregnant, the unborn baby completely depends on the nourishment that is consumed by a mother. In pregnancy, the organ placenta plays a vital role in developing and implanting a mother’s womb. The umbilical cord is connected to the placenta of the unborn baby, which works as the support for the baby to develop baby weeks by weeks. This umbilical cord is the main part that helps a baby to stay alive in the womb. It passes all the nutrients, oxygen passes to the baby as food, and sends back all the waste products and carbon dioxide through the umbilical cord, which is eliminated by the mother.
It won't stay in the baby's cord. It will be in its blood for as long as it's in yours. DO NOT smoke while you are pregnant as the chemicals produced by combustion are dangerous to the fetus. Vaporize it or make edibles to avoid any risk of harm to the baby.
Obviously from the mother herself. The foetus will take the calcium, the minerals and everything that he needs to stay alive (It looks like an human on an intravenous therapy). That's why doctors will often recommend eating more food with calcium and iron to stay strong against the ''sorption'' of nutrients from the body of the woman.
yes. i have had a miscarriage and my stomach has stayed hard.
It might not exit itself but instead cause a infection. If you suspect a miscarriage you should see a doctor. He can either do a D&C and scrape the uterus or give you pills to extract the fetus.
Not very long. Want to know why? Because it gets absorbed by the baby. Everything the mother consumes, the baby consumes. You are putting your unborn baby at risk of developing physical or mental disabilities or even stillbirth or miscarriage. See related question below.
For a couple of months.
It depends on how far along you were on your pregnancy
No, that is a myth.
No, computer viruses cannot "survive" in a power, monitor, keyboard, or mouse, cord.
Had the exact same problem. The wires in the umbilical cord connecting the hatch to the body were broken. See my post at http://www.focusfanatics.com/forum/showthread.php?p=2910989&posted=1#post2910989