It comes out of the mom. The other end of the cord is attached to the placenta (the bag-type thing around the baby) which comes out right after the baby.
No. The umbilical cord is attached to the placenta, which is the sack that the baby grows in. After giving birth, the placenta and the umbilical cord leave the body through the vagina.
It is clamped or tied, then cut.
The umbilical cord comes out of the mother with the placenta.
The umbilical cord breaks.
Yes, all baby gorillas do have an umbilical cord at birth. And that includes all mammals.
The two structures that are connected by the umbilical cord are the embryo and the placenta. The umbilical cord is also known as the navel string or birth cord.
It is the baby's umbilical cord not the woman's. At birth the umbilical cord is tied and cut. the bit attached to the baby shrinks and withers with time to form the navel or belly button. The other end is attached to the placenta and comes out with the afterbirth.
It is not possible for a baby to be born without an umbilical cord. It would not survive in the womb without a placenta delivering its needed nutrients.
During prenatal development in mammals, the umbilical cord connects the fetus to the placenta. In humans, the umbilical cord, or birth cord, is about 20 inches long, and is generally clamped and cut at the newborn infant's navel between 1 and 5 minutes after birth.
the practice of preserving for future use fetal blood that remains in the umbilical cord at the time of birth.
nothing. actually is recommended that the cord to be left uncut after the birth, until he stops pulsating. unfortunately the doctors at the hospital are rushing everything: the birth, the cut of the ombilical cord, elimination of the placenta.
The umbilical cord. The umbilical cord has the function of sending blood to the baby and returning blood from the baby after it has been utilized. There are two arteries in the umbilical cord that do this.