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Your body is preparing for the baby. As you have to grow, the muscles have to stretch causing tender stomach soreness.
Uterine contractions are involuntary. That means they not under your control. When you push down, it the abdominal wall muscles, that contracts. It helps to deliver the baby.
about how many muscles are in a baby's body
A newborn's abdominal wall is not strong right now and so the abdominal muscles split open, allowing some of the intestines to push outside the abdominal wall. It's not serious and usually goes away as the baby gets older. If the condition does not improve by the babie's first birthday, I'd suggest taking your baby to the doctor to see if something non-invasive can be done. Often if it does not get better by age two, a minor surgery is usually done to push the intestines back into the abdominal cavity.
As the mother enters the second stage of labor, her baby's head appears at the top of the cervix. Uterine contractions get stronger. The infant passes down the vagina, helped along by contractions of the abdominal muscles and the mother's pushing.
Its just weight of the baby growing. Its normal.
because thats where the baby is when you are pregnant !
The answer is long, long, long. I will try to answer it in a nutshell: it involves the actions of hormones that act on the uterus to make it contract and expel the baby, and act on the mouth of the uterus to make it open. These contractions are involuntary, but are aided by voluntary contractions of the abdominal and pelvic muscles of the mother. The baby also contributes by turning, rotating and positioning self in such a way that it goes out. Or, you can just have a C-section!
A baby bump is a visible sign of pregnancy, displaying itself as abdominal swelling in a pregnant woman.
In a special organ that only women have called the "uterus".
The muscles contract which in turn push the baby out.
baby phat